Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids have many friends in their Bethesda public schools that could easily afford private, but stay public because they like having their kid in a community school with friends nearby. I’m sure if any of these kids were struggling in public then they’d pull them out, but they all seem very happy with their kids in public and see no need to spend the extra $ on private.
This is also our situation. Being a part of a community in your neighborhood school that transitions to pool, scouts, sports teams etc is immeasurable....even as we moved into high school and were recruited to play sports at some privates we stayed public. So many amazing things about public school. IMO I think many private school kids are missing out on learning how to deal with the world in the bubble of private school however I also believe that they may very well stay in that bubble their entire lives and not even realize it anyway.
Anonymous wrote:No matter what I'm going to complain and have issues with the school. That's the just the way with group education. So I might as well get mad for free rather than pay $50k and still be mad
Anonymous wrote:No matter what I'm going to complain and have issues with the school. That's the just the way with group education. So I might as well get mad for free rather than pay $50k and still be mad
Anonymous wrote:It seems to me public schools are far better at accommodating outlier students, unless the private is specifically for that purpose. Kids with IEPs, gifted kids, etc all tend to be better served in a larger public school, in part because there are simply far more course offerings and specialized programs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do you mean "are they any???" The DMV is full of public school families who could easily afford private and chose not to. Especially in a county like Montgomery.
I was a Big Law partner making close to seven figures years ago and we never even considered private. It made zero financial, educational, or social sense to do it. I was convinced then and continue to believe now that many go the private school route solely because of peer pressure or guilt.
We took the same approach with college. Had our kids gotten into Harvard or Yale, say, then yeah we would have probably paid for that. But that was never in the cards -- as it isn't for the vast majority, even the top private school kids -- and we weren't about to pay for a kid to go to an NYU, a Northeastern, or a WashU when we had in state UVA.
Needlessly throwing away hundreds of thousands of dollars on schooling just to keep up with the Joneses was one game we were never interested in playing, and we have no regrets.
This makes no sense for college if you are making that kind of money. That's selfish. You cannot die with the money so you're just spending it on what?
I am this poster. Please explain how the colleges that I have listed -- and a whole host of other privates -- are materially better and have materially better outcomes than the University of Virginia.
And you're wrong that I can't die with the money I saved. Actually I can, and when I do that money will go to those same kids and they'll be far better off than had I thrown so much money away meaninglessly on private school tuition. Many of you aren't yet in a position to have the benefit of hindsight, but when you are you will see that down the road the specific college that your kid attends makes little different on your professional, personal, or financial success. But what you spend and not save when your family is younger sure does.
Anonymous wrote:My kids have many friends in their Bethesda public schools that could easily afford private, but stay public because they like having their kid in a community school with friends nearby. I’m sure if any of these kids were struggling in public then they’d pull them out, but they all seem very happy with their kids in public and see no need to spend the extra $ on private.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do you mean "are they any???" The DMV is full of public school families who could easily afford private and chose not to. Especially in a county like Montgomery.
I was a Big Law partner making close to seven figures years ago and we never even considered private. It made zero financial, educational, or social sense to do it. I was convinced then and continue to believe now that many go the private school route solely because of peer pressure or guilt.
We took the same approach with college. Had our kids gotten into Harvard or Yale, say, then yeah we would have probably paid for that. But that was never in the cards -- as it isn't for the vast majority, even the top private school kids -- and we weren't about to pay for a kid to go to an NYU, a Northeastern, or a WashU when we had in state UVA.
Needlessly throwing away hundreds of thousands of dollars on schooling just to keep up with the Joneses was one game we were never interested in playing, and we have no regrets.
This makes no sense for college if you are making that kind of money. That's selfish. You cannot die with the money so you're just spending it on what?
Anonymous wrote:Realizing this may trigger some, but genuinely wishing to understand this to help my DH and I make a decision for our kids to be happy, well educated, safe.
Are there any families who could have afforded to send their kids to private school but sent them to public anyway? If so, what was your rationale? Which schools did your kids attend, and were you and your kids happy with the experience?
There seemed to be many people on this site who feel that “if you can afford to go private, go private.”
But I’m sure that impression misses a lot of nuance.
Many of my neighbors and their kids to private, despite our being in a great (or used to be great) school district in MCPS.
They often cite ballooning class sizes, but I’m sure there’s more to it.
TIA
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The private we could afford and fit our family’s values is a big commute due to traffic. Oldest kid did it for 3 years in MS and it got a little better once they started taking the metro. They eventually chose to go public because they got into an interest based program that fits their passion. Now they have a ton of time to get things done because they’re spending 20 minutes total on a bus versus 90-120 minutes in a car or on the metro.
Our public is much more diverse and there are so many more clubs and school activities.
The downside is larger classes and a few really bad teachers. Publics also don’t have equitable resources such as textbooks even within the same school and course.
This. I don't know where in MCPS OP is in, but there are certainly many schools that have so many different types of programs. IMO, this is one of the things that makes MCPS standout (which is why I am against getting rid of the county wide magnet, but that's for another thread).
I think also socially, larger publics is better because if you fall out of one social group, it's a lot easier to find another group. My DC has had to do that a few times between 4th and even now, senior year. If DD was at a small private, which we thought about during covid, I think she would've really struggled socially.
Our private can't hold on to teachers like public can and there are some really bad teachers mixed in with the good ones.
Anonymous wrote:Realizing this may trigger some, but genuinely wishing to understand this to help my DH and I make a decision for our kids to be happy, well educated, safe.
Are there any families who could have afforded to send their kids to private school but sent them to public anyway? If so, what was your rationale? Which schools did your kids attend, and were you and your kids happy with the experience?
There seemed to be many people on this site who feel that “if you can afford to go private, go private.”
But I’m sure that impression misses a lot of nuance.
Many of my neighbors and their kids to private, despite our being in a great (or used to be great) school district in MCPS.
They often cite ballooning class sizes, but I’m sure there’s more to it.
TIA