Anonymous wrote:What the private schools has simply done is priced themselves so that only the top 5% maybe can afford to pay full freight. The schools then raise money to fund FA programs for lower income students, which is great obviously. These schools face 2 choices. First, they can continue to hike tuition. As tuition goes up, the percentage that can pay full freight gets smaller, the need for FA increases, the fundraising pressure increases on the decreasing percentage that can contribute significantly. These schools end up with only the top 1% at most paying full freight, with a few lower income kids. Or, second, these schools can get control of their expenses and program creep attitudes, and reduce tuition. By doing so, maybe the top 20% can pay full freight, which broadens the full paying applicant pool.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:200k should definetly get you financial aid.
NOT. This from a family w/ HHI 80K who pay 45% tuition
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:St John's or Gonzaga.
aren't these both @ 19k-because that is still too much if you've got a couple of kids. When I went to college, room+board+tuition was 15K at Williams in the late 80's. I make a little more $$ than my Dad did in those days, doing the same job. I can't afford to send my kids to private at those prices. And I went to a big 3 private for 5th-12th. It absolutely sucks. Private school tuition in this area really pisses me off.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't ignore the diocesean high schools. Paul IV, Bisphop O'Connell and Ireton have top academics for top students. The schools are diverse in every sense of the word. Average class size is about 10 less than our highly ranked public. The schools also boast top ranked basketball programs (PVI boys is ranked #1 overall in the DC area, O'Connell is usually ranked top 20 and O'Connell girls softball has won VA state championships forever). Don't know about Ivy-level placement but I often hear parents say that they feel their kids get a bit of a college admissions break because they aren't competing against 500 others from the same high school for the same spots (at say UVa).
And soccer...
Anonymous wrote:Don't ignore the diocesean high schools. Paul IV, Bisphop O'Connell and Ireton have top academics for top students. The schools are diverse in every sense of the word. Average class size is about 10 less than our highly ranked public. The schools also boast top ranked basketball programs (PVI boys is ranked #1 overall in the DC area, O'Connell is usually ranked top 20 and O'Connell girls softball has won VA state championships forever). Don't know about Ivy-level placement but I often hear parents say that they feel their kids get a bit of a college admissions break because they aren't competing against 500 others from the same high school for the same spots (at say UVa).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:St John's or Gonzaga.
aren't these both @ 19k-because that is still too much if you've got a couple of kids. When I went to college, room+board+tuition was 15K at Williams in the late 80's. I make a little more $$ than my Dad did in those days, doing the same job. I can't afford to send my kids to private at those prices. And I went to a big 3 private for 5th-12th. It absolutely sucks. Private school tuition in this area really pisses me off.

Anonymous wrote:PP here: Some of the parish schools have an extraordinary track record of getting kids into the private Catholic HS for 9th grade. For both my kid's classes the only kids who went to public were the ones who wanted to. We are not in the "golden" Whitman/Churchill clusters so I really wanted the private HS.
Don't want to hijack this thread, but sounds like your DD is having a fantastic time there.