Anonymous wrote:Ah, 13:56, good luck with that pipe dream. You will come and go, the entrenched poor people in Alexandria will stay.
OP, how do you know your child won't be one of the so-called "troublemakers"?
Anonymous wrote:Ah, 13:56, good luck with that pipe dream. You will come and go, the entrenched poor people in Alexandria will stay.
OP, how do you know your child won't be one of the so-called "troublemakers"?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wrote about the changing demographics. It is correct that the demographic change is not going to happen for the next 2 -5 years. And that will be the beginning of the shift. But OP doesn't actually have kids in school so that timeline may be ok.
I was having the same exact demographic conversation 5 or 6 years ago and things haven't gotten better. Just saying.
Anonymous wrote:I am intrigued by your math. How can you charge $7K - $10K and pay "the teacher" the going rate? What about benefits? What class size is the break-even point? What parents and teacher(s) will want to sign on to a school that is going to re-evaluate at the end of the first year to see if it is worth continuing and that is founded on the vaguest of educational vision statements? ("good ole traditional," I think you said) Would you add a new grade, a new teacher and more space per year or expect it to be a one-room school? Are there going to be any specialist teachers (art, music, etc. or will your wonder-teacher be able to do it all?
From the sounds of it, what you are really thinking of is a home-schooling co-op, as others have said.
But if you continue to research small private schools, here are some examples of very small schools with moderate tuition that are surviving so far:
Feynman School in Bethesda (one class so far but intending to expand, operating out of a church) http://feynmanschool.org
Harbor School in Bethesda (35-50 students, up to grade 2, operating out of a church) - http://www.theharborschool.org
Seneca Academy in Darnestown (about half the student population is preschool; K-6 might be 60-70 students) http://senecaacademy.org
Pinecrest School in Annandale (preK-6, 60-70 students) http://pinecrestschool.org
Anonymous wrote:OP again.
I don't want to move down the parkway. We have obviously considered this option.
many many people in this area are not happy with the "good" elementary schools and do not want to send their kids there.
we would not pay the teacher a lower salary than other teachers in the area.
"troubled" kids might not have been the right term. I know that many kids have all sorts of learning disabilities and challenges at home. I was thinking more about how to handle deliberate naughty behavior.
i don't mean that I think the school should be all work and no play. I think it should be a creative, artistic learning environment. HOwever parents will be very involved and that will be a key component of the school. If you don't want to put the time in then the school is not for you.
Anonymous wrote:I wrote about the changing demographics. It is correct that the demographic change is not going to happen for the next 2 -5 years. And that will be the beginning of the shift. But OP doesn't actually have kids in school so that timeline may be ok.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another person chiming in that you need to:
a) Find out more about public schools in general, ACPS in specific, and how demographics might be changing (see excellent PP.)
b) Rethink your beliefe that "trouble" children only exist in the public school, and you will be able to keep them out. If you are brand new private school, and you have a family with the money, but maybe some kids with discipline issues (which could come from a host of reasons) are you just going to "kick them out"? You lose their money. Private schools have their own challenges.
I do not believe the demographics are changing in ACPS and certainly not that fast. The public housing that is being torn down is being replaced by other public housing buidlings ( higher rise). THe ACPS school system is a disaster and you are not going to convince me otherwise.
My kids may end up being a child with discipline issues. I do not expect perfect angels. I am talking about an approach as to how to handle this. Most private schools have stricter rules and consequences on discipline than public schools. THis is just a fact. I am not coming up with a new concept here, just going along with the private school norm.
Anonymous wrote:Another person chiming in that you need to:
a) Find out more about public schools in general, ACPS in specific, and how demographics might be changing (see excellent PP.)
b) Rethink your beliefe that "trouble" children only exist in the public school, and you will be able to keep them out. If you are brand new private school, and you have a family with the money, but maybe some kids with discipline issues (which could come from a host of reasons) are you just going to "kick them out"? You lose their money. Private schools have their own challenges.