Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your glorification of the public school is delusional. Wait until you get a load of the violence and horrible behavior before you decide your public is “nurturing.” Lol.
I get that you don’t want to drive that much…that’s your only argument with merit.
Houses in our school zone start at $2mm, and there is 0% free lunch population. I am not worried about violence or dangerous behavior.
Materialism and bullying perhaps, but I imagine these issues are also present at the private school. Probably even more so, since the parents live in an area like this and still choose to shell out $50k/yr per kid for the private school experience.
Anonymous wrote:As others have said, elementary is fine for public. It’s middle school where things go way down hill. Ask me how I know.
Anonymous wrote:I agree with your DH but as a compromise:
I’d start at public and reevaluate for middle school, as someone else said. Also be very aware that admission/entry to private is generally far more difficult later on (while entry in K is easy).
Also be aware that neighborhood culture, mom friends etc- while wonderful during the early years- becomes a lot less relevant by mid-elementary or so. By then, all the parents will be back to work FT and families spending their weekends on travel sports. There will be exceptions, but not many.
Anonymous wrote:There is no such thing as a top-public. It's all a sales pitch to get you to spend more on a house. Do what is best for your kids.
Anonymous wrote:Subject says it all. DH and I live in an affluent tri-state area suburb with two young children, a pre-schooler and infant. The public school system here is overall good, although some elementary schools are more highly regarded than others, and the middle and high schools are fine but many families eventually leave for private school.
We live a literally 4 min walk away from one of the "top" elementary schools (rated 9/10 on GreatSchools etc) and it's an incredibly tight knit, down-to-earth community and neighborhood where literally everyone knows and looks out for each other. When we bought our house a few years ago, this was a significant positive and we were both in agreement and thrilled to know that our children would be able to attend such a great school right around the corner. There are a handful of kids in the neighborhood (<10%) who do attend religious private schools and a very small amount who attend the school in question for whatever reason.
Our oldest will be entering K next year, and now my husband has changed his mind and thinks we need to apply to private school now. He is worried that if we wait to apply for middle or high school that it will be much more competitive and we should apply now at K when statistically we have the best chance of getting in, but I'm also not sure the high school at this one is what I want for our child. (There are other more highly regarded private high schools in the area that don't offer a lower/MS).
The school is easily a 20-30 min one way trip during rush hour, so call it an hour round trip, twice a day (!!!!). There is a bus, but not for lower elementary. So realistically I will be the one having to play chauffeur. I work from home with a flexible schedule but this is not how I want to spend my time. And culturally, our current neighborhood is a solid supportive mix of SAHM and working moms, and everyone in between. We did the private school tour this weekend and it seems to be overwhelmingly shiny SAHMs who drive Range Rovers. Also this school is not particularly regarded for being particularly academically rigorous, but rather for creating a very manicured, hand-held community experience.
I'm so upset and angry at him that he would want to pull our son out of such a nurturing community right here that we have come to love, where all of his neighborhood and pre-school buddies are and will get to be together. And selfishly I already have so many mom friends here and I'm afraid the private school moms wouldn't be my people.
The other factor at play is that DH attended private school K-12, I attended a solid public in a district not at all unlike the one where we currently live, and we both got into (and met at) the same elite college.
I am just going to pray we don't actually get accepted to this school and hopefully the decision is made for us.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Public for elementary and reevaluate at middle school. Based on your description, it's a no brainer. The sense of community that's provided by attending a strong local school is key at that age!
Agree with this. K-6 is a great time to build your community. If you decide private is what you want for middle school, your child will have a base of friends in their neighborhood and can then build new friendships at the private school. I wouldn’t give that up for a “what if” scenario that’s years down the road.
+1 my son started kindergarten this year at our walkable public elementary that sounds really similar to yours and it has been so lovely. Already making lots of neighborhood friends, building community. I think it really makes a difference and makes little sense to pay so much money to give up that sense of community when you have a great public.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Public for elementary and reevaluate at middle school. Based on your description, it's a no brainer. The sense of community that's provided by attending a strong local school is key at that age!
Agree with this. K-6 is a great time to build your community. If you decide private is what you want for middle school, your child will have a base of friends in their neighborhood and can then build new friendships at the private school. I wouldn’t give that up for a “what if” scenario that’s years down the road.
Anonymous wrote:Start in public and se what you think. If your kid is thriving stay. If not...go elsewhere.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The school is easily a 20-30 min one way trip during rush hour, so call it an hour round trip, twice a day (!!!!). There is a bus, but not for lower elementary. So realistically I will be the one having to play chauffeur. I work from home with a flexible schedule but this is not how I want to spend my time.
Nope. Tell him that if he wants your child to go to private that he will be the one chauffeuring child to and from school. You are not going to add that drive to your schedule. So, either public or he rearranges his work schedule to do the driving.
But then, I'm a guy who placed top 3% of a large public high school (in another state) and got into a T10 school. And I come from UMC/affluent parents who were able to pay full fare for all three of their kids so that none of us ended with any student debt.
If you would be borrowing from your children's college savings to pay for private school tuition then the answer is definitely no. You only send your kids to private if you can afford to fully pay for their college without loans and still pay for private tuition and any other needs/luxuries that your family wants, like vacations and such. Private school, especially at the ES level is a much lower priority and a luxury, especially when you have a good public nearby.