Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The public school your child would attend if they weren’t in private is probably the same in terms of demographics if you have a 7 figure HHI.
Because you choose to live in a neighborhood where everyone is rich and mostly white. Move.
Why? I could care a crap less about the race. But why would I not live someplace where everyone is rich? That is where rich people live.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Books, documentaries, movies, YouTube videos, wikipedia articles, sometimes even social media posts.
You'll learn a lot more about the plight of the poor by reading a book written by a poor person than you will working alongside a poor person.
Huh? All this ensures is that you can pat yourself on the back for knowing all about poor people without ever actually knowing any poor people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Books, documentaries, movies, YouTube videos, wikipedia articles, sometimes even social media posts.
You'll learn a lot more about the plight of the poor by reading a book written by a poor person than you will working alongside a poor person.
Huh? All this ensures is that you can pat yourself on the back for knowing all about poor people without ever actually knowing any poor people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The public school your child would attend if they weren’t in private is probably the same in terms of demographics if you have a 7 figure HHI.
Because you choose to live in a neighborhood where everyone is rich and mostly white. Move.
Why? I could care a crap less about the race. But why would I not live someplace where everyone is rich? That is where rich people live.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The public school your child would attend if they weren’t in private is probably the same in terms of demographics if you have a 7 figure HHI.
Because you choose to live in a neighborhood where everyone is rich and mostly white. Move.
Anonymous wrote:If you do, what do you do to help them gain some perspective?
No snarky responses, please, this is a real concern and it’s hard to have these conversations in person.
We love the bubble our k-8 provides our kids — caring, small community, focus on kindness, etc. We plan to keep them in private school all the way — I’m not debating the value of private school for our kids.
We are also a relatively well-off family — seven figure HHI. We live a nice lifestyle, and I’m happy with how we spend our money.
However, I don’t know if it’s possible for my kids to gain perspective on how fortunate we/they are, and that most of the world (even within in US) doesn’t live like we do. We talk about it, I talk about my own, very modest childhood. My kids do chores and they get told no when they want to buy things. They have visited where my family comes from (parents are immigrants, I’m a POC) and have seen the poverty that exists there.
But their daily life and exposure is large homes, lots of toys, expensive experiences, and just generally abundant. Also beautiful school grounds and lots of resources to support their goals.
I went to HYP from a low-income public school and was really turned off by the spoiled, entitled private school kids who mostly found each other. I don’t want my kids to end up that way.
Anonymous wrote:Books, documentaries, movies, YouTube videos, wikipedia articles, sometimes even social media posts.
You'll learn a lot more about the plight of the poor by reading a book written by a poor person than you will working alongside a poor person.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The public school your child would attend if they weren’t in private is probably the same in terms of demographics if you have a 7 figure HHI.
Because you choose to live in a neighborhood where everyone is rich and mostly white. Move.
Anonymous wrote:The public school your child would attend if they weren’t in private is probably the same in terms of demographics if you have a 7 figure HHI.
Anonymous wrote:Private schools tend to be more diverse than public’s.
Anonymous wrote:If you do, what do you do to help them gain some perspective?
No snarky responses, please, this is a real concern and it’s hard to have these conversations in person.
We love the bubble our k-8 provides our kids — caring, small community, focus on kindness, etc. We plan to keep them in private school all the way — I’m not debating the value of private school for our kids.
We are also a relatively well-off family — seven figure HHI. We live a nice lifestyle, and I’m happy with how we spend our money.
However, I don’t know if it’s possible for my kids to gain perspective on how fortunate we/they are, and that most of the world (even within in US) doesn’t live like we do. We talk about it, I talk about my own, very modest childhood. My kids do chores and they get told no when they want to buy things. They have visited where my family comes from (parents are immigrants, I’m a POC) and have seen the poverty that exists there.
But their daily life and exposure is large homes, lots of toys, expensive experiences, and just generally abundant. Also beautiful school grounds and lots of resources to support their goals.
I went to HYP from a low-income public school and was really turned off by the spoiled, entitled private school kids who mostly found each other. I don’t want my kids to end up that way.
Anonymous wrote:Richer does not equal better.
If you believe it, then your kids might too.
Anonymous wrote:Books, documentaries, movies, YouTube videos, wikipedia articles, sometimes even social media posts.
You'll learn a lot more about the plight of the poor by reading a book written by a poor person than you will working alongside a poor person.