Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was in a similar place 6 years ago. Ultimately we chose public and then moved our 5th grader this year from public to private. I don't think the school I would have picked for her as a kindergartener is the school that fits her best now. There is some benefit to enjoying the early years at public and then identifying the right learning environment in late elementary/middle.
This is true, but also your kid will not turn out the same by late elementary/middle. Those formative years in public vs private will have an impact.
Anonymous wrote:I was in a similar place 6 years ago. Ultimately we chose public and then moved our 5th grader this year from public to private. I don't think the school I would have picked for her as a kindergartener is the school that fits her best now. There is some benefit to enjoying the early years at public and then identifying the right learning environment in late elementary/middle.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I sometimes feel guilty about not sending my kids to public school too. So I know where you're coming from. But from what I've seen our local public school would not be able to challenge my children academically and would be unwilling to support their relatively minor special needs because other kids are struggling way more. So they are at the local Catholic school where the academic expectations are generally higher and the school is more willing to write an accommodation plan for a child who is basically doing fine and not creating huge issues and just needs a few tweaks. But still sometimes I feel like I'm letting down the kids who are like mine but whose parents can't afford private school and don't know that they can sue the public school to write the 504/do the IEP evaluation.
You aren't letting those kids down, you are freeing up resources for them. They have the same number of special ed teachers and support specialists at your public school whether your kid is there or not.
Anonymous wrote:Unpopular opinion here, probably...but as a former public school teacher - many public schools aren't a good fit for a lot of kids. In many schools, the teachers are overwhelmed by classrooms that are too large, not enough resources, children who need more support than they are getting in the large classroom, behavior challenges, etc.
Many people cannot afford private school and will convince themselves it's the best and the right thing to do. But the reality is that American public schools are failing kids every day.
If you have a great local public and you are cool with things like PTA arguments over whether they should pay to have a nurse full time or headphones for the drama club (this was an actual thing when my kid went to a highly rated public school), they by all means go there. There are several kids who will happily take your child's spot at the private school.
I don't say this to be a jerk, but really at the end of the day you need to just make the right decision for you and your family. Just because the other wealthy family down the street is sending their kid to the private school doesn't mean you have to as well. It isn't inertia - there is too much involved in applying. It was a conscious choice.