Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can def make it work if it’s your priority. But are you sure it’s worth the sacrifice? You could do a lot with that money.
We put our kids through private (Highland School, Warrenton). They had a great life foundational experience and education that taught them responsibility, respect, compassion, leadership, values, comraderie, as well as STEM and the art and humanies. There is absolutely nothing I could put on a scale with the money spent that could outweigh that. They went on to graduate top engineering schools and work for companies that are some of the headline news "up 80% year to date" movers talked about on this board. And they still remain close and networked with their friends from Highland.
I'm curious about the Highland School. Do most of the students live nearby and how far away do you live from the school? My kids are not quite old enough for school yet and I am trying to figure out how long of a drive for private for school is too much.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can def make it work if it’s your priority. But are you sure it’s worth the sacrifice? You could do a lot with that money.
We put our kids through private (Highland School, Warrenton). They had a great life foundational experience and education that taught them responsibility, respect, compassion, leadership, values, comraderie, as well as STEM and the art and humanies. There is absolutely nothing I could put on a scale with the money spent that could outweigh that. They went on to graduate top engineering schools and work for companies that are some of the headline news "up 80% year to date" movers talked about on this board. And they still remain close and networked with their friends from Highland.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My two kids went to public schools and both attended top 20 colleges. One is an urology resident and the other has started his own IT services company. It’s been well documented that within the same socioeconomic group, private school is a huge waste of money. But hey you do you and thanks for subsidizing my kids’ educations.
Stupid comment. There are no “public schools” vs “private schools”. Some public schools are great and others aren’t. Some private schools are worth it and others aren’t. Some kids do better in some private/publics. Sneering at other families’ choices just shows your own narrowness.
Anonymous wrote:My two kids went to public schools and both attended top 20 colleges. One is a urology resident and the other has started his own IT services company. It’s been well documented that within the same socioeconomic group, private school is a huge waste of money. But hey you do you and thanks for subsidizing my kids’ educations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My two kids went to public schools and both attended top 20 colleges. One is a urology resident and the other has started his own IT services company. It’s been well documented that within the same socioeconomic group, private school is a huge waste of money. But hey you do you and thanks for subsidizing my kids’ educations.
Waste of money is a bit harsh.
I place private schools in the same category as buying a luxury car over a basic Honda. Your good suburban public is like a Honda or Toyota, it does the job reliably enough and gets you to where you need to go. But the luxury car is unquestionably a nicer, smoother and more enjoyable ride. Is the luxury car a waste of money?
Then there's the other valid argument that private schools are terrific for middle of the pack kids who can get overlooked in a bigger and busier public school environment and it can make the difference in fostering confidence. Whether that's worth the tuition fees multiplied by how many years will be up to the individual.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My two kids went to public schools and both attended top 20 colleges. One is a urology resident and the other has started his own IT services company. It’s been well documented that within the same socioeconomic group, private school is a huge waste of money. But hey you do you and thanks for subsidizing my kids’ educations.
Not, OP here. We have a mortgage at 2% and low property taxes. Trading up for a top school district is just as expensive as private if you only have one kid.
But the house will be an asset you own long after your kid graduates school.
Anonymous wrote:My two kids went to public schools and both attended top 20 colleges. One is an urology resident and the other has started his own IT services company. It’s been well documented that within the same socioeconomic group, private school is a huge waste of money. But hey you do you and thanks for subsidizing my kids’ educations.
Anonymous wrote:My two kids went to public schools and both attended top 20 colleges. One is a urology resident and the other has started his own IT services company. It’s been well documented that within the same socioeconomic group, private school is a huge waste of money. But hey you do you and thanks for subsidizing my kids’ educations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My two kids went to public schools and both attended top 20 colleges. One is a urology resident and the other has started his own IT services company. It’s been well documented that within the same socioeconomic group, private school is a huge waste of money. But hey you do you and thanks for subsidizing my kids’ educations.
Not, OP here. We have a mortgage at 2% and low property taxes. Trading up for a top school district is just as expensive as private if you only have one kid.
Anonymous wrote:You can def make it work if it’s your priority. But are you sure it’s worth the sacrifice? You could do a lot with that money.
Anonymous wrote:My two kids went to public schools and both attended top 20 colleges. One is a urology resident and the other has started his own IT services company. It’s been well documented that within the same socioeconomic group, private school is a huge waste of money. But hey you do you and thanks for subsidizing my kids’ educations.