Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not rip him away from his friends. That's cruel.
Or is it cruel to leave him in his current school?
Why would it be cruel to leave a child where they are happy and doing well?
Doing well by what measures? The standards at public school?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not rip him away from his friends. That's cruel.
Or is it cruel to leave him in his current school?
Why would it be cruel to leave a child where they are happy and doing well?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have an elementary child who is perfectly happy and content at the local public. He has a lot of friends, is doing well in school and seems to be getting everything he needs from the local school. He attended a preschool that is a private school feeder so most of his former preschool classmates are attending various private schools in the DMV. We can easily afford private school. I can’t help but feel we are somehow hurting our child by sending him to public by not providing the best education we can give to him. He is the type of kid who would do well anywhere. He was very well liked in preschool and had is also well liked now in public. Our preschool had children of famous parents.
You gave away your actual concern in the last sentence. This isn't about the best education for your kid, but whether you think he'll be missing out not to hobnob with the children of wealthier parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not rip him away from his friends. That's cruel.
Or is it cruel to leave him in his current school?
Anonymous wrote:I would not rip him away from his friends. That's cruel.
Anonymous wrote:I have an elementary child who is perfectly happy and content at the local public. He has a lot of friends, is doing well in school and seems to be getting everything he needs from the local school. He attended a preschool that is a private school feeder so most of his former preschool classmates are attending various private schools in the DMV. We can easily afford private school. I can’t help but feel we are somehow hurting our child by sending him to public by not providing the best education we can give to him. He is the type of kid who would do well anywhere. He was very well liked in preschool and had is also well liked now in public. Our preschool had children of famous parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Of course. He’s thriving and happy because of his life as a whole not because of public school.
This.
OP, I don't know if you every look at the pubic school forums here, but most public schools are a hot mess. Lots of grade inflation, large class sizes, etc. Your child is young, and this is the time to make the switch and it sounds like money is not an issue for you. If private doesn't work out for whatever reason, you can always go back to public school or find another private school. But know that the reason you kid is doing well is not necessarily because he is bright. It may very well be that he is bright, but the school is not challenging him, likely because of equity. Leave now while it is an easy transition. It gets more difficult in the later years and they will fall behind with the lax curriculum.