Anonymous wrote:When we moved to private from public to Catholic schools, it was easy just to say we did it because we wanted our kids attend a school with Catholic values. That way they didn't feel insulted or anything...the school we picked obviously had something that would never be offered at any public school.
It worked out fine. I am still friends with the people who I would have hung out with even if we didn't have kids the same age. Grew apart from the other moms.
It'll be fine OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are at a public that we have been at for years and have worked hard on, along with our neighbors. We've grown close to other families, served on committees, hung out on the weekends, etc. It's a great school in many ways, with many great families, but we are now thinking of moving to private. Our child was accepted to first choice school which offers a different approach not available at our public, and which we think will be a good fit for child.
My question is: when and how do you tell other public school families that you're leaving the school? Is right away best, end of the school year, etc? W/o outing ourselves, I think that a few families will be surprised, disappointed, maybe even angry at first. I'd love to tell them in person,
but it seems that may be impractical (assuming words spread before we can speak with everyone we'd like to tell in person). Hoping for some folks who have BTDT.
You should invite everyone over and have drinks and snacks. Prepare a slide show of DCs years at the public school and with friends. At the end of the slide show, have a talk prepared to let everyone know and thank them for supporting DC. That way people can comfort each other, deal with the shock. Offer to speak privately with anyone who needs time to digest and accept the decision to change schools. The children should be told by the parents as they see fit. It would be nice to create some gift bags with photos of DC and some treats for the kids. It would be best to do it on a Friday or Saturday, so the families can have some time to accept the reality of life without DC. In the last few weeks of school, be proud but not smug, empathetic but not apologetic. People will envy you in more ways than ever. Quietly bask in the afterglow.
OP here. While I was annoyed when I first read this, I have to grudgingly admit that it's actually pretty good.![]()
I understand why my OP would seem like naval-gazing and self-centeredness in the extreme--like we're expecting the school community to be reeling from one measly family leaving. So no, as I said in an earlier follow-up, it's really only a few families that will care. However, w/o revealing too much--this is a public school that is probably unlike many that folks in the private forum have any experience with. And we've worked hard behind the scenes, led tours for interested families, have advocated for more resources, etc. Because we've been so public-facing re: the school, I don't want it to reflect badly on the school now that we're leaving, since again, it's not that we're dissatisfied with the public; we just think the private's curriculum would be a good fit for our kid.
And as for trying to manage everyone's reactions, I'll have to let go of that and accept that some people will be pissed and some will be surprised, and most won't care that much. And, importantly, we can still advocate for the school as members of the community even if we don't have a kid who attends next year.
Thanks to all the helpful PPs--and the funny ones!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are at a public that we have been at for years and have worked hard on, along with our neighbors. We've grown close to other families, served on committees, hung out on the weekends, etc. It's a great school in many ways, with many great families, but we are now thinking of moving to private. Our child was accepted to first choice school which offers a different approach not available at our public, and which we think will be a good fit for child.
My question is: when and how do you tell other public school families that you're leaving the school? Is right away best, end of the school year, etc? W/o outing ourselves, I think that a few families will be surprised, disappointed, maybe even angry at first. I'd love to tell them in person,
but it seems that may be impractical (assuming words spread before we can speak with everyone we'd like to tell in person). Hoping for some folks who have BTDT.
You should invite everyone over and have drinks and snacks. Prepare a slide show of DCs years at the public school and with friends. At the end of the slide show, have a talk prepared to let everyone know and thank them for supporting DC. That way people can comfort each other, deal with the shock. Offer to speak privately with anyone who needs time to digest and accept the decision to change schools. The children should be told by the parents as they see fit. It would be nice to create some gift bags with photos of DC and some treats for the kids. It would be best to do it on a Friday or Saturday, so the families can have some time to accept the reality of life without DC. In the last few weeks of school, be proud but not smug, empathetic but not apologetic. People will envy you in more ways than ever. Quietly bask in the afterglow.
Anonymous wrote:Our situation is a little different because we have stayed in public through middle school and have moved kids to private for HS. But, like you, I've been on the executive committee of the PTAs at MS and ES and was asked to take key roles in HS PTA when our 1st DC was applying out. I was careful not to make the eye-rolling (and frankly not very kind) comments that the PP above mentioned that we were moving for something better, but focused on our DCs needing something different (i.e., single sex, smaller classes, immersion, whatever that is for you). I have friends who moved in early elementary and I think you will find that your real friends won't care and will understand that you may want something different for your DC and that does not diminish the local public schools. For anyone else, don't give it a second thought and move on from that friendship. I would go ahead and just casually mention now because I do think it is a little weird when people keep it "secret" until the end of the year. You can still care about your local ES even if you know you are leaving and still be involved through the end of the school year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I think you're correct that there are at least some people in your school community who will care--it sounds like you're at a school that parents are working to improve, and maybe is your IB/neighborhood school? If so, there is likely to be a little tension. It's unavoidable. We have friends who transferred to another coveted public from their neighborhood school after four years there working hard on building the PTA, and there were a lot of tough conversations with both other parents who were also putting that time in, and also with some of the teachers as they shared that they were leaving. I think you have a bit of a boost on them in that you're leaving for a very specific school environment, not just another "better" public. (Are you the person who is looking at language immersion? If so, that's a pretty clear distinction between where you are now and the new school; lean on that.) At the end of the day you have to go with what's best for your child, though. If it makes you feel better, I work for our public school district and am waiting on lottery results to decide whether to go public or private. I have only told a few people we even applied to private, because there's definitely a stigma associated with it. There's no easy answer. Good luck!
OP here. Wow, you're pretty accurate in your above assumptions re: type of public school we're at, and the specific reason we're leaving. Didn't realize I was that transparent!We actually haven't told a soul at current school; only teacher knows since we asked for letter of rec.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are at a public that we have been at for years and have worked hard on, along with our neighbors. We've grown close to other families, served on committees, hung out on the weekends, etc. It's a great school in many ways, with many great families, but we are now thinking of moving to private. Our child was accepted to first choice school which offers a different approach not available at our public, and which we think will be a good fit for child.
My question is: when and how do you tell other public school families that you're leaving the school? Is right away best, end of the school year, etc? W/o outing ourselves, I think that a few families will be surprised, disappointed, maybe even angry at first. I'd love to tell them in person,
but it seems that may be impractical (assuming words spread before we can speak with everyone we'd like to tell in person). Hoping for some folks who have BTDT.
You should invite everyone over and have drinks and snacks. Prepare a slide show of DCs years at the public school and with friends. At the end of the slide show, have a talk prepared to let everyone know and thank them for supporting DC. That way people can comfort each other, deal with the shock. Offer to speak privately with anyone who needs time to digest and accept the decision to change schools. The children should be told by the parents as they see fit. It would be nice to create some gift bags with photos of DC and some treats for the kids. It would be best to do it on a Friday or Saturday, so the families can have some time to accept the reality of life without DC. In the last few weeks of school, be proud but not smug, empathetic but not apologetic. People will envy you in more ways than ever. Quietly bask in the afterglow.
Anonymous wrote:We are at a public that we have been at for years and have worked hard on, along with our neighbors. We've grown close to other families, served on committees, hung out on the weekends, etc. It's a great school in many ways, with many great families, but we are now thinking of moving to private. Our child was accepted to first choice school which offers a different approach not available at our public, and which we think will be a good fit for child.
My question is: when and how do you tell other public school families that you're leaving the school? Is right away best, end of the school year, etc? W/o outing ourselves, I think that a few families will be surprised, disappointed, maybe even angry at first. I'd love to tell them in person,
but it seems that may be impractical (assuming words spread before we can speak with everyone we'd like to tell in person). Hoping for some folks who have BTDT.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are at a public that we have been at for years and have worked hard on, along with our neighbors. We've grown close to other families, served on committees, hung out on the weekends, etc. It's a great school in many ways, with many great families, but we are now thinking of moving to private. Our child was accepted to first choice school which offers a different approach not available at our public, and which we think will be a good fit for child.
My question is: when and how do you tell other public school families that you're leaving the school? Is right away best, end of the school year, etc? W/o outing ourselves, I think that a few families will be surprised, disappointed, maybe even angry at first. I'd love to tell them in person, but it seems that may be impractical (assuming words spread before we can speak with everyone we'd like to tell in person). Hoping for some folks who have BTDT.
You sound like an incredible A-hole, so I would let everyone know. It's the probably the first good news they've heard in a while. Don't let the door hit ya, where to good Lord split ya.
Anonymous wrote:We are at a public that we have been at for years and have worked hard on, along with our neighbors. We've grown close to other families, served on committees, hung out on the weekends, etc. It's a great school in many ways, with many great families, but we are now thinking of moving to private. Our child was accepted to first choice school which offers a different approach not available at our public, and which we think will be a good fit for child.
My question is: when and how do you tell other public school families that you're leaving the school? Is right away best, end of the school year, etc? W/o outing ourselves, I think that a few families will be surprised, disappointed, maybe even angry at first. I'd love to tell them in person, but it seems that may be impractical (assuming words spread before we can speak with everyone we'd like to tell in person). Hoping for some folks who have BTDT.