Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parent at both public and private.
I don't know anyone who belongs to country clubs or participates in regattas.
Also both public and private. I know people who belong to country clubs and participate in regattas. But they're public school parents!
Anonymous wrote:PP which JKLM did you leave?
Anonymous wrote:If you can afford a single family home in those districts you should be able to pay $1,000 a year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP who left ward 3 JKLM - how come? what private did you go to? Situation better?
The primary reason was access to a curriculum much more in line with our (academic) values and goals in educating the kids. If anything, flashy private school facilities are a turn off, not an asset. I'd rather not say the current school, but want to say we didn't hate the DCPS elementary. There was a lot to like there which is why we gave it a shot and willingly paid hundreds of $ into PTA, auction, etc.
(Yes, I realize it's 4 am and no I'm not a troll. Damn wine sulfites)

Anonymous wrote:PP who left ward 3 JKLM - how come? what private did you go to? Situation better?
Anonymous wrote:Parent at both public and private.
I don't know anyone who belongs to country clubs or participates in regattas.
If private school costs 35k a year isn't paying 2k a year for a good school a pretty sweet deal? Yes, I know the JKLM doesn't have fancy facilities, small class size etc. But for a fairly comparable experience it seems like a no-brainier.
Anonymous wrote:that really is key. the ability to control and remove disruption is huge in allowing kids to focus and excel.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:we are at Murch. after seeing the numbers above ($2000 per child??), we must be the black sheep of the JKLM schools. last year the suggested PTA contribution per child was $350 (people give what they can, more, less or even nothing), and I thought it was steep. the biggest fundaser is the spring auction. people offer/buy things in all price ranges. I have seen people put down $2000 for a dinner by a chef or $10 for a shirt. my relatives own an apartment in a very sought after location and we offered it at the auction, getting $1500 that went to the school.
Yeah, this is what I was thinking. $350/kid recommended at Murch, but I'm sure people give at a wide range of levels. I think the HSA raises something like $200k-$250k/year between this and the auction and a few other fundraisers.
New Murch parent here. We got an HSA letter today asking for only $15 in dues. Do they ask for the $350 at another time?
