Anonymous wrote:I'm with you OP. One of the things that shocked me the most when we moved to the Langley district was that people went to lower tier boarding schools. Langley is one of the best public schools in America. Why do you feel the need to go to
Mercersburg or Suffield Academy?
Anonymous wrote:I guess it's a cultural thing in some subsets of the population. Frankly, I think it s un-American. Public education is a foundation of American society. To me the popularity of boarding and private schools shows a divestment of public education on behalf of the upper class.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I have considered the same question.
I knew someone who went to a second-tier boarding school and then on to a third-tier state school.
A little hard to comprehend.
Anonymous wrote:I guess it's a cultural thing in some subsets of the population. Frankly, I think it s un-American. Public education is a foundation of American society. To me the popularity of boarding and private schools shows a divestment of public education on behalf of the upper class.
Anonymous wrote:If you weren't born rich OP you just wouldn't get it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1) Boarding school is a unique experience that cannot be replicated by a day school.
2) The "second tier" schools, as you call them, are still excellent. It's not unlike college. The NMHs of the world are akin to Kenyon, Wesleyan etc. Still fantastic places to get a great education.
3) Like colleges, each school has a unique profile and you want to find the school that is the right "fit." Exeter and Andover are huge. Groton is very small. Deerfield is very isolated geographically. Tabor is where you go if you want to sail competitively. Choate's theater program is incredible. etc. Miss Porter's is the most competitive girls' school. You get the drift.
^^ yes. And Mercersburg is an incredible community with a commitment to diversity. Boarding school is an amazing experience - it's not about "tiers", it's about kids spreading their wings, and growing as a whole person. It is an amazing gift to give your kid, if he/she wants to go and you find the right fit. It is not, as a PP said, about parents who are abdicating parenting.
Anonymous wrote:I went to one years ago. There was a combination of "old boys" whose families have gone there forever, students with parents working abroad or in remote places or places with poor schools, and "speciality" students who were there to do something (usually a sport but sometimes theater, language, etc.) on a higher level than their local schools could accommodate.
None of these situations applies to me now that I have school-age kids, and I also don't have $60k lying around, so we are not considering it at all.
Anonymous wrote:1) Boarding school is a unique experience that cannot be replicated by a day school.
2) The "second tier" schools, as you call them, are still excellent. It's not unlike college. The NMHs of the world are akin to Kenyon, Wesleyan etc. Still fantastic places to get a great education.
3) Like colleges, each school has a unique profile and you want to find the school that is the right "fit." Exeter and Andover are huge. Groton is very small. Deerfield is very isolated geographically. Tabor is where you go if you want to sail competitively. Choate's theater program is incredible. etc. Miss Porter's is the most competitive girls' school. You get the drift.
Anonymous wrote:A lot of boarding schools have better financial aid packages than day schools. I am thinking about looking into boarding schools that aren't too far away because I don't know if I would get enough FA at a local private school.