Anonymous wrote:I'm a PP who won't "just move." Responding to 10:48, the reason we don't rent is that it actually works financially for us to send one kid private and live in a cheap house in a bad school district. I agonized for a while about my desire to support the public schools, but then I realized: moving to a rich neighborhood and leaving my working class neighborhood with yet another house on the market is just moving trouble around. I would get to say I use the public schools, yes, but the neighborhood we'd move to would be even more exclusive than the independent school my kid now goes to. So I guess what I'm trying to say is that we don't see avoiding paying tuition as our family's highest financial or moral goal. Getting a great education and spending lots of time together are. There are lots of ways to skin that cat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Four kids, full tuition, across different private schools (though not religious or parochial schools). Probably between 7-8 per cent of net.
Wow- what's your HHI?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many of us are in lousy school clusters (or entire counties), 07:46. Yes, I know, some aren't, but most people in my DS's independent school are there after trying the public route for the oldest child, deciding it wasn't going to work, and switching. So for me (lousy public option) paying 20% of my after tax income for school, while living in a small crappy house and paying 15% of take home on mortgage, still leaves us with a decent quality of life. The key for us is if we're going to do private we must stay in the small crappy house or else the finances don't work. Since we like the school more than we care about housing it works fine.
Why not just move to a better house in a good school district?
Anonymous wrote:We paid 2-3 private school tuitions for many years. Between 2002 and 2012 tuition as a percentage of our net income probably went from 10% to 50%. Wow!
Guess what? Last year we switched the kids to public. Although it was a hard choice they're doing well and it is such a RELIEF! There was no way we could keep pace with those tuition increases.
Anonymous wrote:Four kids, full tuition, across different private schools (though not religious or parochial schools). Probably between 7-8 per cent of net.
Anonymous wrote:I don't know. Better than the Koreans.
"He estimates that 70 percent of household expenditures go toward private education."
http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Asia-Pacific/2012/1110/Drive-for-education-drives-South-Korean-families-into-the-red