Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop trolling. So earning less than 250k a year and not being able to pay 60k in this housing market means you have problems?
If you are asking for charity, i.e. financial aid, then yes.
So you think that people who receive financial aid and scholarships in college are asking for charity? If you do, you are obtuse and insolent. These schools cost more in tuition than many colleges.
Financial aid, yes that’s a literal that means charity. Scholarships, no that’s a payment for excellence.
You are an idiot. “Scholarships” in college work just like financial aid in private school. It’s easier for people who can pay “full sticker price” to get in. But many students, at some schools most students, get some scholarship funding to lessen the cost. The average price paid at many schools is far below sticker.
You are an idiot. Scholarship and financial aid are NOT the same thing. Not all scholarships are needs based. Scholarships are based on attaining high GPAs or having an unusual talent in sporting or arts valued by an institution. If you ever got one you would know that. All financial aid is needs based. Dummy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop trolling. So earning less than 250k a year and not being able to pay 60k in this housing market means you have problems?
If you are asking for charity, i.e. financial aid, then yes.
So you think that people who receive financial aid and scholarships in college are asking for charity? If you do, you are obtuse and insolent. These schools cost more in tuition than many colleges.
Financial aid, yes that’s a literal that means charity. Scholarships, no that’s a payment for excellence.
You are an idiot. “Scholarships” in college work just like financial aid in private school. It’s easier for people who can pay “full sticker price” to get in. But many students, at some schools most students, get some scholarship funding to lessen the cost. The average price paid at many schools is far below sticker.
You are an idiot. Scholarship and financial aid are NOT the same thing. Not all scholarships are needs based. Scholarships are based on attaining high GPAs or having an unusual talent in sporting or arts valued by an institution. If you ever got one you would know that. All financial aid is needs based. Dummy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop trolling. So earning less than 250k a year and not being able to pay 60k in this housing market means you have problems?
If you are asking for charity, i.e. financial aid, then yes.
So you think that people who receive financial aid and scholarships in college are asking for charity? If you do, you are obtuse and insolent. These schools cost more in tuition than many colleges.
Financial aid, yes that’s a literal that means charity. Scholarships, no that’s a payment for excellence.
You are an idiot. “Scholarships” in college work just like financial aid in private school. It’s easier for people who can pay “full sticker price” to get in. But many students, at some schools most students, get some scholarship funding to lessen the cost. The average price paid at many schools is far below sticker.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:[mastodon]Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP were you born yesterday? Public schools are way more segregated than private on this axis. Private schools are paying millions per year for socioeconomic diversity through financial aid. Meanwhile home prices and NIMBY behavior are keeping good public schools behind locked gates for most.
You hit the nail on the head.
Sure. Private schools are more inclusive than public schools.
it's not the schools it's the people. Wherever you go, there the people are. People exclude others not like them.
Sure. That makes it acceptable.
It's human nature. For all the inclusion talk there are so many kids left on the sidelines. Not cool enough, too weird, annoying, etc. Why focus on just SES or race? Exclusion happens in every single classroom.
Because those things are resulted from something the kid nor the kid’s family can control and has been happening to the same race of people for hundreds of years on US soil.
Discrimination has been going on since humanity lumbered from the primordial ooze. All races, every corner of earth, all since day one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love dcum posts. It’s an easy way to check how racist people are in the dc area.
It's racist to want a good education for your kids? Guess that crabs in a barrel thing isn't working out the way you hoped.
Anonymous wrote:These are trolls posting. Designed to make racism and classism seem more popular than it is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop trolling. So earning less than 250k a year and not being able to pay 60k in this housing market means you have problems?
If you are asking for charity, i.e. financial aid, then yes.
So you think that people who receive financial aid and scholarships in college are asking for charity? If you do, you are obtuse and insolent. These schools cost more in tuition than many colleges.
Financial aid, yes that’s a literal that means charity. Scholarships, no that’s a payment for excellence.
Anonymous wrote:I love dcum posts. It’s an easy way to check how racist people are in the dc area.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The DC private schools are not as much of a wealth/privilege bubble as some people here say. It is all relative. For a lot of us this is just normal life in DC and we see schools elsewhere as privileged.
It is all relative, but my kids have been in class and friends with kids in their public schools that have been living in shelters or didn’t have food to eat when they got home from school (wonderful, sweet kids btw). You don’t see that kind of poverty at DC privates - and arguably these are the kids that need the most help if we are going to truly care about equity and diversity.
Anonymous wrote:I love dcum posts. It’s an easy way to check how racist people are in the dc area.