Anonymous wrote:Well my kids go to private and are not snobby, intolerant, or entitled. They are great kids with diverse friends and interests, and volunteer and give back. Our kids dont get international vacations and we dont live in a big house. We are a mixed race, solidly middle class family getting great financial aid. Our kids are thriving at their progressive school, and we love the education they are getting.
Dont believe generalities.
Anonymous wrote:Our family can afford private nut we chose public immersion school to get language exposure.
Anonymous wrote:I'm curious. How many of you PPs will really stay public past elementary?
My family didn't have the luxury of choice and middle school as a minority student was the stuff of nightmares. Drugs, 12 year-old girls pregnant, daily fights in cafeteria/lunchroom/gymnasium "multipurpose" room because facilities were so pathetic, students coming to school hungry or full of Lay's/Kool-Aid "breakfast"...getting swatted on the butt trying to get to class, hands put down my shirt, shoved into lockers etc. Diversity did not promote academic achievement nor did it facilitate understanding. In fact it drove us further apart.
So much time was spent on disciplinary issues and reinforcing classroom expectations that no real learning went on. I spent the majority of my classroom time in the corner with a book I'd brought from home.
Anonymous wrote:I think its crazy to not at least try public school, at least for the elem years.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks for sharing your story. Do you think if you had gone to public school all the way through your adult life would have turned out any different?
Anonymous wrote:"Exposing our kids to diversity is very important to my husband and I."
Anonymous wrote:"Exposing our kids to diversity is very important to my husband and I. We want our kids to have exposure to people if different backgrounds and this is hard to get at a private. Can you comment a bit on what the differences were between you public versus private education? "
Correct grammar.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hello. My kid is not yet school age but is about to be and we go bak and forth on whether to send them to a public or private. We are blessed to be able to afford private, but think it's important to utilize and help strengthen public institutions when possible. Are there any other wealthy parents out there that are currently or considering in the future sending their kids to city public schools?
Your obligation is to your child, not to society. If the public schools are good send your child there by all means. If they are crappy, you are doing your child a disservice and I doubt would make any change to the system.