Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yep, our private all boys school in DC hasn’t turned out to be worth the full tuition we pay at over 30 grand a year.
At least you're honest instead of trying to justify value that's not there.....
Thank you, many posts get angry when anything unfavorable is said about the school even though it’s the case or they will spin it to downplay it.
I did not anticipate this and really hoped it would’ve turned out to what I was sold on, I’m actually quite sad about it for my child. But it’s too much of a disappointment. It didn’t have to be as wonderful as the school and parents touted, I just would’ve appreciated more honesty. Take what they say with a grain of salt, there is major bias and you’ll only get information of what they want you to know and all the polish.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yep, our private all boys school in DC hasn’t turned out to be worth the full tuition we pay at over 30 grand a year.
At least you're honest instead of trying to justify value that's not there.....
Thank you, many posts get angry when anything unfavorable is said about the school even though it’s the case or they will spin it to downplay it.
I did not anticipate this and really hoped it would’ve turned out to what I was sold on, I’m actually quite sad about it for my child. But it’s too much of a disappointment. It didn’t have to be as wonderful as the school and parents touted, I just would’ve appreciated more honesty. Take what they say with a grain of salt, there is major bias and you’ll only get information of what they want you to know and all the polish.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yep, our private all boys school in DC hasn’t turned out to be worth the full tuition we pay at over 30 grand a year.
At least you're honest instead of trying to justify value that's not there.....
Anonymous wrote:We’re moving one back and keeping one in private.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yep, our private all boys school in DC hasn’t turned out to be worth the full tuition we pay at over 30 grand a year.
Are you talking about SAAS?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yep, our private all boys school in DC hasn’t turned out to be worth the full tuition we pay at over 30 grand a year.
who could have ever predicted this
We actually applied before late 2019 before we knew about covid and got notified that he was accepted 2 weeks before covid shutdown. So in our case it was not related to covid. However, we learned that while maybe one or two classes are better but some are worse, overall it’s not what I expected from one of the top privates in DC. Gave it a fair chance and not going to waste any more there. It’s been a monumental disappointment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yep, our private all boys school in DC hasn’t turned out to be worth the full tuition we pay at over 30 grand a year.
who could have ever predicted this
Anonymous wrote:I'm on the board at my kid's PreK-8, (not DC), and this upcoming year (22-23) is the largest applicant pool and class sizes in our history.
I think a lot of people who stuck with public this year became very dissatisfied very quickly. The staffing shortages, transportation issues, food service snafus, lack of aftercare, constant quarantines... it has just been an endless cluster.
For the dual-income working families I know at privates, the cost of private school is an insurance policy for one's own sanity.
(I work in public education, so I am in touch with both the public & private worlds).
Anonymous wrote:
We had a "pilot child" at a 15K school, but are sending all of them next year because the differences between the local public -- highly performing, based on its test scores -- and the private are staggering.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I imagine this will be more the case at less competitive and less expensive schools (parochial, for example).
Why? They are getting bigger bang for the buck. The more pricey schools are probably not worth it for many people with limited funds, especially if they are already in a "good" school district.
It is the reverse. The pricey ones are a big difference from public, the less expensive not so much except for class size, and the teachers can be far less qualified at either compared to public.
Exactly...the schools around $40K are dramatically different than a public school...the ones around $20K not so much
We had a "pilot child" at a 15K school, but are sending all of them next year because the differences between the local public -- highly performing, based on its test scores -- and the private are staggering.