Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I taught in public schools for years. Then I moved to a high end private. My kids are in college now and attended a beyond excellent public magnet in another area (so, not MCPS, but another urban district). The private looked amazing until about 6 weeks in. Then I saw all the weaknesses with the curriculum and the major behaviors. If I had to do it over I would have kept them in their magnet. Yes, every school has issues and the magnet did too, but overall, it was much better than my nearly 40K a year in tuition private school workplace.
I taught at a Big Three for 10+ years and later took a job with MCPS. Our kids attended MCPS magnets (including Blair SMCS and RMIB) and got a better education than I believe they would have at the Big Three based on my experience there.
Anonymous wrote:Came across this article that mentioned a survey indicating that if given the choice 90% of public school teachers would send their kids to private school and am wondering how accurate that is in my own county.
‘Why I’m a Public School Teacher But a Private School Parent’
https://tenneyschool.com/why-im-a-public-school-teacher-but-a-private-school-parent/
Here’s another similar article but different author from a couple of years ago:
‘Why I’m a Public-School Teacher but a Private-School Parent’
https://www.theatlantic.com/education/archive/2015/03/why-im-a-public-school-teacher-but-a-private-school-parent/386797/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The vast majority of teachers could not afford private for their kids.
I moved in with my mom to make it happen. Public school isn’t much to talk about these days. Just show up, do some work, and get an A. Nope. I want better for my kid.
My kid did that and did not get As in everything.
Is that what you're doing? Giving everyone an A?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The vast majority of teachers could not afford private for their kids.
I moved in with my mom to make it happen. Public school isn’t much to talk about these days. Just show up, do some work, and get an A. Nope. I want better for my kid.
Anonymous wrote:The vast majority of teachers could not afford private for their kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Came across this article that mentioned a survey indicating that if given the choice 90% of public school teachers would send their kids to private school and am wondering how accurate that is in my own county.
‘Why I’m a Public School Teacher But a Private School Parent’
https://tenneyschool.com/why-im-a-public-school-teacher-but-a-private-school-parent/
Here’s another similar article but different author from a couple of years ago:
‘Why I’m a Public-School Teacher but a Private-School Parent’
https://www.theatlantic.com/education/archive/2015/03/why-im-a-public-school-teacher-but-a-private-school-parent/386797/
No. Use the better public teacher salary to pay for private school tuition.
I make less in MCPS than I did working in private because MCPS refuses to acknowledge a teacher’s full years of experience. Add in the tuition remission, financial aid, smaller classes, more planning time, cleaner facilities, and shorter school year it’s a great job! I only left because of the pandemic and I’m doing all I can to get out of MCPS and back into private
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Came across this article that mentioned a survey indicating that if given the choice 90% of public school teachers would send their kids to private school and am wondering how accurate that is in my own county.
‘Why I’m a Public School Teacher But a Private School Parent’
https://tenneyschool.com/why-im-a-public-school-teacher-but-a-private-school-parent/
Here’s another similar article but different author from a couple of years ago:
‘Why I’m a Public-School Teacher but a Private-School Parent’
https://www.theatlantic.com/education/archive/2015/03/why-im-a-public-school-teacher-but-a-private-school-parent/386797/
No. Use the better public teacher salary to pay for private school tuition.
I make less in MCPS than I did working in private because MCPS refuses to acknowledge a teacher’s full years of experience. Add in the tuition remission, financial aid, smaller classes, more planning time, cleaner facilities, and shorter school year it’s a great job! I only left because of the pandemic and I’m doing all I can to get out of MCPS and back into private
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Came across this article that mentioned a survey indicating that if given the choice 90% of public school teachers would send their kids to private school and am wondering how accurate that is in my own county.
‘Why I’m a Public School Teacher But a Private School Parent’
https://tenneyschool.com/why-im-a-public-school-teacher-but-a-private-school-parent/
Here’s another similar article but different author from a couple of years ago:
‘Why I’m a Public-School Teacher but a Private-School Parent’
https://www.theatlantic.com/education/archive/2015/03/why-im-a-public-school-teacher-but-a-private-school-parent/386797/
No. Use the better public teacher salary to pay for private school tuition.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My youngest will be a senior at a MCPS high school this year. When my children started in MCPS years ago I they were getting quality education. Now I am so thankful that my youngest only has a year left. I would absolutely be considering private if my kids were younger now. The high school experience has been terrible. Teachers are checked out, fights, vaping, limited access to bathrooms. Academics are ok with AP and IB programs if your child is self motivated and wants to learn, sports have been ok. I just can’t get over the fact that DC doesn’t have bathroom access. We as adults would never put up with it.
Is this for every school - even ‘W’ schools like Wootton?
Anonymous wrote:Came across this article that mentioned a survey indicating that if given the choice 90% of public school teachers would send their kids to private school and am wondering how accurate that is in my own county.
‘Why I’m a Public School Teacher But a Private School Parent’
https://tenneyschool.com/why-im-a-public-school-teacher-but-a-private-school-parent/
Here’s another similar article but different author from a couple of years ago:
‘Why I’m a Public-School Teacher but a Private-School Parent’
https://www.theatlantic.com/education/archive/2015/03/why-im-a-public-school-teacher-but-a-private-school-parent/386797/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My youngest will be a senior at a MCPS high school this year. When my children started in MCPS years ago I they were getting quality education. Now I am so thankful that my youngest only has a year left. I would absolutely be considering private if my kids were younger now. The high school experience has been terrible. Teachers are checked out, fights, vaping, limited access to bathrooms. Academics are ok with AP and IB programs if your child is self motivated and wants to learn, sports have been ok. I just can’t get over the fact that DC doesn’t have bathroom access. We as adults would never put up with it.
Is this for every school - even ‘W’ schools like Wootton?