Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They should compete for that student, who will want for nothing in life by virtue of being rich and talented, by offering a truly exceptional school experience, not by taking money away from kids who need it. I hope my kids' school doesn't want a family that is that wealthy but not willing willing to pay tuition because they think their kid is so great she should go to the highest bidder. Not great values.
No one said that the family was seeking this. But if they had acceptances at three equivalent schools and one school really wanted the student and offered a free ride, then it’s a win-win for both student and school to accept the offer. Happy wealthy parents potentially mean large donations to the school, so it’s hard to see a loser in this scenario.
Anonymous wrote:They should compete for that student, who will want for nothing in life by virtue of being rich and talented, by offering a truly exceptional school experience, not by taking money away from kids who need it. I hope my kids' school doesn't want a family that is that wealthy but not willing willing to pay tuition because they think their kid is so great she should go to the highest bidder. Not great values.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I guess we would be the nearly destitute people you mention OP (at least in this area we are). My DS was accepted to some independent schools but since we required too much FA, he couldn’t accept. How many really “poor” students attend these schools?
Well, my personally opinion about private schools such as big 3 or those that cost over 43K/yr look for:
- full pay students
- some slots for students with exceptional academic but can't pay full. They will get FA depend on HHI. Low income family will get full FA
- some slots for recruited athletes. Some might qualify for FA. Those that are low income will get full FA.
- a few slots for exceptional athletes or extremely talented musicians, those students that the school really wants. They don't have to pay anything even when the family can easily afford the tuition. Those students bring exposure to the schools and bragging rights.
My nephews, an exceptional athlete and violinist, attended one of the big 3s for free even when my brother HHI is 1.5M/yr. Go figure.
If this is true, I'd be extremely upset and would no longer make donations to the scholarship fund. Anyone with a HHI of that much should be embarrassed to take FA away from the type of student it was designed to serve.
Schools compete for truly exceptional students. If three good privates really want a standout student, the winner is going to offer more than just admission. If you were to stop making donations it would hurt the kids who need FA, not the school.
They should compete for that student, who will want for nothing in life by virtue of being rich and talented, by offering a truly exceptional school experience, not by taking money away from kids who need it. I hope my kids' school doesn't want a family that is that wealthy but not willing willing to pay tuition because they think their kid is so great she should go to the highest bidder. Not great values.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:we are blessed with many very high quality public schools.
What are the specific "very high quality public schools" that a lower middle class family can access?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I guess we would be the nearly destitute people you mention OP (at least in this area we are). My DS was accepted to some independent schools but since we required too much FA, he couldn’t accept. How many really “poor” students attend these schools?
Well, my personally opinion about private schools such as big 3 or those that cost over 43K/yr look for:
- full pay students
- some slots for students with exceptional academic but can't pay full. They will get FA depend on HHI. Low income family will get full FA
- some slots for recruited athletes. Some might qualify for FA. Those that are low income will get full FA.
- a few slots for exceptional athletes or extremely talented musicians, those students that the school really wants. They don't have to pay anything even when the family can easily afford the tuition. Those students bring exposure to the schools and bragging rights.
My nephews, an exceptional athlete and violinist, attended one of the big 3s for free even when my brother HHI is 1.5M/yr. Go figure.
If this is true, I'd be extremely upset and would no longer make donations to the scholarship fund. Anyone with a HHI of that much should be embarrassed to take FA away from the type of student it was designed to serve.
Schools compete for truly exceptional students. If three good privates really want a standout student, the winner is going to offer more than just admission. If you were to stop making donations it would hurt the kids who need FA, not the school.
Anonymous wrote:FA isn’t just about SES. I’ve literally been told by a school - in writing no less - that their FA was intended to diversify the school, which we don’t do. Admitted, yes. Being white meant no FA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I guess we would be the nearly destitute people you mention OP (at least in this area we are). My DS was accepted to some independent schools but since we required too much FA, he couldn’t accept. How many really “poor” students attend these schools?
Well, my personally opinion about private schools such as big 3 or those that cost over 43K/yr look for:
- full pay students
- some slots for students with exceptional academic but can't pay full. They will get FA depend on HHI. Low income family will get full FA
- some slots for recruited athletes. Some might qualify for FA. Those that are low income will get full FA.
- a few slots for exceptional athletes or extremely talented musicians, those students that the school really wants. They don't have to pay anything even when the family can easily afford the tuition. Those students bring exposure to the schools and bragging rights.
My nephews, an exceptional athlete and violinist, attended one of the big 3s for free even when my brother HHI is 1.5M/yr. Go figure.
If this is true, I'd be extremely upset and would no longer make donations to the scholarship fund. Anyone with a HHI of that much should be embarrassed to take FA away from the type of student it was designed to serve.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I guess we would be the nearly destitute people you mention OP (at least in this area we are). My DS was accepted to some independent schools but since we required too much FA, he couldn’t accept. How many really “poor” students attend these schools?
Well, my personally opinion about private schools such as big 3 or those that cost over 43K/yr look for:
- full pay students
- some slots for students with exceptional academic but can't pay full. They will get FA depend on HHI. Low income family will get full FA
- some slots for recruited athletes. Some might qualify for FA. Those that are low income will get full FA.
- a few slots for exceptional athletes or extremely talented musicians, those students that the school really wants. They don't have to pay anything even when the family can easily afford the tuition. Those students bring exposure to the schools and bragging rights.
My nephews, an exceptional athlete and violinist, attended one of the big 3s for free even when my brother HHI is 1.5M/yr. Go figure.
Anonymous wrote:FA isn’t just about SES. I’ve literally been told by a school - in writing no less - that their FA was intended to diversify the school, which we don’t do. Admitted, yes. Being white meant no FA.
Anonymous wrote:we are blessed with many very high quality public schools.