Anonymous wrote:Lazy thinking is your friend sometimes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Actually the parent community matters. You end up interacting with them and their children will end up engaging with yours ( or not if it’s cliquish and think your family does not fit etc.)
Why do you end up interacting with them? Why is it different than public school? Are you joining a social club or a school?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Actually the parent community matters. You end up interacting with them and their children will end up engaging with yours ( or not if it’s cliquish and think your family does not fit etc.)
Why do you end up interacting with them? Why is it different than public school? Are you joining a social club or a school?
You don’t get it if you are not in a top private. There are games 1-2 times a week you attend with other parents and events at the school 1-2 times per month at least in addition to these are the kids and families affecting your kids. It matters.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:stereotypes exist for a reason
To facilitate lazy thinking.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a mom who doesn’t work outside the home and if someone described me as an unemployed mom I would probably punch them in their flinty eyed face so whoever wrote that, if you’re wondering why the moms at your school don’t like you let this be a clue.
This seems like an odd bone to pick. From the Oxford Dictionary:
un·em·ployed (adjective) (of a person) without a paid job but available to work
Whether you are educated and wealthy or poor and uneducated, both of you can be considered unemployed. Even if you don't like it, it's true.
Beyond the literal definition, it can have a negative connotation (you’re not ambitious, you don’t work, etc., which if you’ve ever been a homemaker with kids, is patently untrue on all accounts)
I absolutely understand this but it is still, nonetheless, true.
Anonymous wrote:I am a mom who doesn’t work outside the home and if someone described me as an unemployed mom I would probably punch them in their flinty eyed face so whoever wrote that, if you’re wondering why the moms at your school don’t like you let this be a clue.
Anonymous wrote:I think its interesting that people assume every type of parent doesn't exist at all these schools. Choose one school over another isn't going to be like a magic social circle of happiness. The best thing you can do is pick the school based on the philosophy of the school and if it feels like a good fit for your kid. Chances are, if you do that..you will find families that value similar things and likely vibe with many of them as a result.
Anonymous wrote:stereotypes exist for a reason
Anonymous wrote:I think its interesting that people assume every type of parent doesn't exist at all these schools. Choose one school over another isn't going to be like a magic social circle of happiness. The best thing you can do is pick the school based on the philosophy of the school and if it feels like a good fit for your kid. Chances are, if you do that..you will find families that value similar things and likely vibe with many of them as a result.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DCUM stereotypes of the parents at my kid's school were 100% right. I wish I'd believed them going in instead of being led down the garden path by admissions and admin. I'm not sure it would have changed anything but at least I would have had my eyes open.
Search for the worst, most troll filled threads you can find about your prospective schools. Take everything you read about the parent vibe as absolute gospel.
Thank me later.
What was this school?
Yes, I would like to know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a mom who doesn’t work outside the home and if someone described me as an unemployed mom I would probably punch them in their flinty eyed face so whoever wrote that, if you’re wondering why the moms at your school don’t like you let this be a clue.
This seems like an odd bone to pick. From the Oxford Dictionary:
un·em·ployed (adjective) (of a person) without a paid job but available to work
Whether you are educated and wealthy or poor and uneducated, both of you can be considered unemployed. Even if you don't like it, it's true.
Beyond the literal definition, it can have a negative connotation (you’re not ambitious, you don’t work, etc., which if you’ve ever been a homemaker with kids, is patently untrue on all accounts)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who gives a shit what the families are like? You’re not going to school, your kid is. God private school people are weird.
Actually, it does matter. My DD was looking at all girls schools and often, the moms can drive who socializes with who and can influence the friend group. We visited three schools and found the following:
#1 - Lots of unemployed moms who hung around the school "volunteering" all of the time and basically, had their hand in all aspects of school activities, who their kid could socialize with, etc.
#2 - Most moms with great and impressive careers but also were members of country clubs and most socialization revolved only those families who were similarly situated.
#3 - Lots of educated moms with great careers - many of whom were wealthy but were still down to earth and welcoming to me and my kid. Volunteered at the school when asked but were otherwise very involved in their own personal lives/careers.
Guess which school we chose?