Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would you take your child out of MCPS if there was a private school voucher program so Montgomery County residents had school choice?
Sure, if you want to ruin any chance of an average family getting their kids a great education.
yeah, giving families MORE choice really ruins that![]()
Again, please provide a list of secular private schools that will accept the voucher for the entire tuition.
Maybe add to that the number of available openings.
Are you really suggesting that if ALL families want private school choices, the options are there?
why would there be a list for something that does not yet exist?
An earlier poster suggested an amount per student that would transfer with the student as a voucher. Even as a ball park guideline, surely those who champion vouchers can compare this amount with the tuition and fees that area secular private schools charge.
Anonymous wrote:One who graduated public and one we pulled out of and put in a $50k private their freshman year in HS after the MCPS cluster f*ck that started with Covid.
I would have over $200,000 toward retirement and other expenses, but we don't, because MCPS is still such a mess. Oh well, will work a few more years. Vouchers are not the answer, because saving me the $$ won't help the publics, only hurt them. And it won't help most who can't afford the $50k to attend. And, the privates do not have enough space for all the MCPS public school students.
What MCPS needs is to clean house, everyone in Central Office needs to go, esp those who claim Special Ed, but all they do is hurt special Ed students and programs. Also, clean house of the Board of Education. They do not do any oversight, they listen to what MCPS tells them and then agree. That is the only way we will get any change of course/corrections to the once mighty school system.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would you take your child out of MCPS if there was a private school voucher program so Montgomery County residents had school choice?
Sure, if you want to ruin any chance of an average family getting their kids a great education.
Wait, what? Average kids in MCPS are not getting a 'great education'. Not on your life. Most are barely even getting an 'adequate education'.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would you take your child out of MCPS if there was a private school voucher program so Montgomery County residents had school choice?
Sure, if you want to ruin any chance of an average family getting their kids a great education.
yeah, giving families MORE choice really ruins that![]()
Again, please provide a list of secular private schools that will accept the voucher for the entire tuition.
Maybe add to that the number of available openings.
Are you really suggesting that if ALL families want private school choices, the options are there?
why would there be a list for something that does not yet exist?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would you take your child out of MCPS if there was a private school voucher program so Montgomery County residents had school choice?
It would hollow out public education so that private would be the only option but the right loves to privatize everything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:YES, please. Students and parents deserve a choice.
MCPS is SO dysfunctional. Feels like it is beyond repair.
You already have a choice to send kids private.
MCPS is still a top 1% school system nationwide
Charter Schools are by and large a failure, voucher programs are more giveaways for privates and those who seek to destroy government and the administrative state like insurrectionist Steve Bannon, and the ROI on privates is 0. So no
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would you take your child out of MCPS if there was a private school voucher program so Montgomery County residents had school choice?
Sure, if you want to ruin any chance of an average family getting their kids a great education.
Anonymous wrote:Vouchers wouldn’t cover the entire amount of a private school so ultimately this would benefit only well all families. Secondly, I have a problem with taxpayer money funding religious schools.
Anonymous wrote:Would you take your child out of MCPS if there was a private school voucher program so Montgomery County residents had school choice?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes - I’ll take a voucher. DD is a 2e and has an IEP which MCPS isn’t even trying to follow. And it’s not super complicated.
A voucher for private would be cheaper for them than having to go to court. (And me…and my kid who is an emotional wreck from not getting support she needs.)
I've seen posts by people who said they moved to MCPS out of private because the private couldn't accommodate the SN. Public schools are required to offer IEP. Privates are not.
So, not sure why you think a private school would be better at providing the IEP.
There are privates who have smaller specialized programs for students with disabilities. They also have staffing where MCPS has so many vacancies right now. Finally, it’s all the disharmonious meetings with school staff. I would rather leave and have my child educated by professionals who care about his development and needs.
Anonymous wrote:This is almost too laughable. Watching the social experiment that you voters have placed upon the MCPS system over the past two decades and its' now expected results, you want to run away from what you have caused to happen. Why don't you stay and fix what you screwed up? Get your buts out there and run for office instead of hiding behind an anonymous board spouting about how this is so horrible. And for goodness sake, DO NOT VOTE the way you have in the past, that is how we got here. So thankful I am finished with MCPS, it has become a total s t show and the parents that got it there are walking around going "but, how did this happen?"
Anonymous wrote: Vouchers would, by far, benefit people who can already afford private schools the most. Some people like me, who are willing to have our taxes support public schools for the common good, will be deeply incensed if our tax dollars are spent to decimate the quite decent public school system in order to support religious schools and the wealthy.