Anonymous wrote:No doubt that the schools in McLean are good. My only concern was the large class sizes and my children not having one on one attention in their early years. I strongly believe it is important for a child to be in a nurturing environment and I never saw that in public schools. I am also a strong believer in having a solid foundation in the early elementary years. With 30+ kids in public schools this makes it impossible. These were my reasons for sending my kinds to private schools from k-3. Now that they are in public schools. I look back and I have no regrets at all. It was worth every penny.
If you can afford to send your kids to private in the early years, do it. It is a wonderful investment in your child's education. With that said, if you can not afford it, the public schools here in fairfax county is a good alternative. Just give them at home what they may not be getting at the public school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. My husband and I are very conservative and are on the lower end of income for private school parents low to mid 200's. I have one kid who is finishing 5th and another that's in K.
It was totally worth it. Every single one of my daughter's friends comes from a very good and caring family and I think it is so important as they are so impressionable at that age. I'm not sure if my daughter would have fallen into the right crowd in public school. When she is around model students, she is a model student and there are fewer model students in public schools statistically speaking.
My daughter is also involved in an outside activity where she is the only private school kid and while the parents are nice, she acts out when she is around these kids. I'm not sure the dynamics of why- but there is a huge difference in the way she acts.
I also think she's getting a better education because she wants to perform like her friends. Since she is highly influenced by other people, my daughter is much better off in private.
My son who is younger would probably have done fine in public school. However, he wrote a short essay about who he would like to be like and he wrote about the pope. We aren't very religious but the paper melted my heart and it was beautifully written for someone his age so I think his school helping him develop fully into a very good human being.
We might not drive fancy cars or have a fancy house- but I'll do anything to provide my kids with a good environment.
Troll post, right?
Pounce-worthy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:While my child is developing socially, emotionally, and academically? ABSOLUTELY. Smaller classes, differentiated curriculum, constant communication...worth every penny when they are young.
+1
You are naive if you think public schools don't offer the same. My DD's class for PreK3 was 13 kids with 2 FT teachers in the class. We are in private now and there are 22 kids in her class with 1 teacher.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:While my child is developing socially, emotionally, and academically? ABSOLUTELY. Smaller classes, differentiated curriculum, constant communication...worth every penny when they are young.
+1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. My husband and I are very conservative and are on the lower end of income for private school parents low to mid 200's. I have one kid who is finishing 5th and another that's in K.
It was totally worth it. Every single one of my daughter's friends comes from a very good and caring family and I think it is so important as they are so impressionable at that age. I'm not sure if my daughter would have fallen into the right crowd in public school. When she is around model students, she is a model student and there are fewer model students in public schools statistically speaking.
My daughter is also involved in an outside activity where she is the only private school kid and while the parents are nice, she acts out when she is around these kids. I'm not sure the dynamics of why- but there is a huge difference in the way she acts.
I also think she's getting a better education because she wants to perform like her friends. Since she is highly influenced by other people, my daughter is much better off in private.
My son who is younger would probably have done fine in public school. However, he wrote a short essay about who he would like to be like and he wrote about the pope. We aren't very religious but the paper melted my heart and it was beautifully written for someone his age so I think his school helping him develop fully into a very good human being.
We might not drive fancy cars or have a fancy house- but I'll do anything to provide my kids with a good environment.
Troll post, right?
Anonymous wrote:Our child loved his time at elementary private ... he went K thru 5. He is now doing well at public middle and unless something dramatic changes, we plan to continue with public high school. The money for private was extremely high, and in retrospect, I think we mostly purchased a nice experience for him rather than better academics. The campus was nicer, the small community was nurturing and cozy, the specials and field trips were nicer, and so on. But the actual learning was fine but not anything he wouldn't have gotten at the neighborhood school. So we are pleased that he had such a nice experience that he will look back on fondly, but if I knew then what I know now, I probably would not have paid over $130,000 for it.
It very much depends on what your alternative would have been, of course.
Anonymous wrote:While my child is developing socially, emotionally, and academically? ABSOLUTELY. Smaller classes, differentiated curriculum, constant communication...worth every penny when they are young.
Anonymous wrote:No, we've had kids in public and private schools in this area. While there were differences, these were not stark. The best outcome is public immersion, but that can be difficult to swing depending on where you live.
Another question to ask yourself is, how does your public option stack up against the private school your child can actually get into. Not, how does public stack up against your ideal private school.
However, if you are zoned for a bad public school, or if your child has special needs, private can make great sense.
Anonymous wrote:Yes. My husband and I are very conservative and are on the lower end of income for private school parents low to mid 200's. I have one kid who is finishing 5th and another that's in K.
It was totally worth it. Every single one of my daughter's friends comes from a very good and caring family and I think it is so important as they are so impressionable at that age. I'm not sure if my daughter would have fallen into the right crowd in public school. When she is around model students, she is a model student and there are fewer model students in public schools statistically speaking.
My daughter is also involved in an outside activity where she is the only private school kid and while the parents are nice, she acts out when she is around these kids. I'm not sure the dynamics of why- but there is a huge difference in the way she acts.
I also think she's getting a better education because she wants to perform like her friends. Since she is highly influenced by other people, my daughter is much better off in private.
My son who is younger would probably have done fine in public school. However, he wrote a short essay about who he would like to be like and he wrote about the pope. We aren't very religious but the paper melted my heart and it was beautifully written for someone his age so I think his school helping him develop fully into a very good human being.
We might not drive fancy cars or have a fancy house- but I'll do anything to provide my kids with a good environment.