Anonymous wrote:Facing a similar situation. Have a cousin who is in custody of her grandmother (my relative) as mother got into lots of trouble and had custody taken away. I don't refer to it as flyover country, but heroin and meth pervades in her town so maybe it's heroin alley? We've been paying her full tuition at the only local private school, but that school only educates up to 8th grade. We took them to visit 2 boarding schools a few hours away, and they seemed to like it, but now it's incredibly difficult to get her grandmother to take any of the steps towards the application process. To me, it's not that difficult to print out the teacher recommendation forms and hand them to the teachers, but it's not something I can do from here hundreds of miles away.
I've never interfered in the school I currently pay for. I don't even know her grades, though I've heard they are good. If she doesn't continue in some type of private school, we fear she's going to end up in a bad situation at the local public high school, where teenage pregnancy, meth arrests, and opiate overdoses are a regular occurrence.
My guess is grandmother is wavering between the boarding school idea. She's older so it would be hard to manage a teenager and she knows it, but on the other hand she'll be all alone if my cousin moves out. She has no friends and family left in the town she lives in, and doens't work either.
Anonymous wrote:Quite obvious over half the people responding to this are public parents. Don't you all have your own forum?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are far better off paying for college over high school.
You haven't been around working poor/ lower middle class people. College isn't a given. If the kids go to private high school they stand a much better chance to go to college because they will have a different peer group. Most parents who pay over 10,000 for high school expect their kids to go to college.
OP- you and DH are doing the right thing. Keep trying and begging them to accept, it might be too late with the 14 year old but you might have a chance with the 12 year old. I have 2 sil's that never attended college. I pay my nephews and nieces 100 dollars a semester if they get straight A's, 75 for all A's and one B (except PE I don't count as long as they pass). We are the only family members who encourage academics. If I had the money we would pay for one nephew who tries really hard to get straight A's to go to private school.
NP here. I grew up working class. My parents valued academics -- in fact, they valued academics much more than all of the emphasis on sports I see among the upper middle class now. My parents were strict with grades. Sure, they didn't know how to navigate college applications and scholarships, but they pressed me hard and made it clear that I had to find a way to pay for it. They also made it clear that not going to college would make my life a lot harder.
My parents would never have accepted money from a relative for school. NEVER. Because they also valued earning things themselves and not taking handouts. And they taught me to value that as well.
I ended up with a full academic scholarship.
Don't make generalizations about "the working class."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your sister is an idiot and anyone defending her in this thread is a bitter public parent or just trolling. This is a complete no-brainer. I know plenty of grandparents paying for grandkids at my daughter's private school.
No one doubts that, but grandparents paying is different than a sister paying. Moreover, OP is openly contemptuous of her sister. That kind of "help" comes with so many strings as to be self-defeating. You KNOW OP is the type to use the financial assistance as a stick to beat her sister and nieces about the head with. She would absolutely demand to see report cards and the like. Not worth it. Not at all.
Anonymous wrote:Your sister is an idiot and anyone defending her in this thread is a bitter public parent or just trolling. This is a complete no-brainer. I know plenty of grandparents paying for grandkids at my daughter's private school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP here.
OP, can you tell us
1) why your sister said no, and
2) (If the answer is different) why *you think* your sister said no?
She's close-minded
Anonymous wrote:Your sister is an idiot and anyone defending her in this thread is a bitter public parent or just trolling. This is a complete no-brainer. I know plenty of grandparents paying for grandkids at my daughter's private school.
Anonymous wrote:Feel free to pay for my kids.
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like you are lording over your sister with your wealth. She may not be very bright or educated, but she sees your condescension and a potential future obligation clearly enough. She does not want to be indebted to you and it hurts her pride to accept your charity, as it's offered in such a pitying way. The PPs are correct that your attitude is offensive.