Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Neighbors who do this (MoCo, W cluster) do it because:
- family 1: wanted a religion-based education, always planned to go private
- family 2: special needs kid, just felt like private was a better fit; never planned to go private
- family 3: status/want to show off money; have several kids, all in different privates and travel sports; probably always planned to go private
- family 4: both parents teach at the same private school, tuition is covered and it's convenient; would switch to public if the circumstances changed
Hate to break it to you but parents show off money by getting a huge house, a country club membership, brand new cars ever few years and lavish trips. They do not show off their money by spending it for a child to go to a school. They don't. I am not saying there are not people in private schools that do show off money, but most do not. And there are plenty of parents that show off their money and save more of it for themselves by sending their kids to public.
Not sure what travel sports has to do with it either.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are struggling with whether to enroll our DD in K in our school district (FCC) or bus her to "top tier" private school she was just accepted at. I would love to hear from parents who live in great public school districts but chose to send their kids to private anyways.
My concern stems mainly from the really high student-teacher ratios at many of the "great" publics and the fact that many of these pyramids are over capacity to begin with and expecting large additional future growth. I don't want my kid caught up in an rapidly overcrowding school district, but it seems irrational on its face to consider private when you pay FCC taxes. More importantly, there's a social component. All our friends and DD's friends live in FCC. We'd have help with pick-up and drop-off if we need it. Playdates would be close by. We are unlikely to develop a great social network at the private considering how far it would be away.
Would really appreciate hearing from other parents who made this decision. TIA!
On the flip side of public schools having larger class sizes, private schools have teachers who are uncertified and earn far less than public school teachers.
Anonymous wrote:Neighbors who do this (MoCo, W cluster) do it because:
- family 1: wanted a religion-based education, always planned to go private
- family 2: special needs kid, just felt like private was a better fit; never planned to go private
- family 3: status/want to show off money; have several kids, all in different privates and travel sports; probably always planned to go private
- family 4: both parents teach at the same private school, tuition is covered and it's convenient; would switch to public if the circumstances changed
Anonymous wrote:We were struggling with the same issue. We live in a "great" part of the FCPS system but are choosing to commute and go private.
Our main reasoning is because DC needs to be challenged and I don't see it happening in a classroom with 25-30 Kindergarteners. Student teacher ratio is big with us so we're willing to stretch for a few years until all the babies are in the same private.
Fortunately for us, our social circle is not in our neighborhood and our close friends are very like minded. Their children attend a lot of the privates in the area. Think Alexandria Country Day, Ideaventions, PVI, etc.
It wasn't an easy choice but now that we've made it, we're completely satisfied and DC could not be more excited to start in the fall.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most of the people I know in close in Northern VA, who attend private, do so for the "social" aspect.
That says a lot about you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Langley HS pyramid. Sent our children to private school from K-12.
Langley pyramid is way overrated.
- Left public after 6th grade
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Langley HS pyramid. Sent our children to private school from K-12.
Langley pyramid is way overrated.
- Left public after 6th grade
Anonymous wrote:We are struggling with whether to enroll our DD in K in our school district (FCC) or bus her to "top tier" private school she was just accepted at. I would love to hear from parents who live in great public school districts but chose to send their kids to private anyways.
My concern stems mainly from the really high student-teacher ratios at many of the "great" publics and the fact that many of these pyramids are over capacity to begin with and expecting large additional future growth. I don't want my kid caught up in an rapidly overcrowding school district, but it seems irrational on its face to consider private when you pay FCC taxes. More importantly, there's a social component. All our friends and DD's friends live in FCC. We'd have help with pick-up and drop-off if we need it. Playdates would be close by. We are unlikely to develop a great social network at the private considering how far it would be away.
Would really appreciate hearing from other parents who made this decision. TIA!
Anonymous wrote:Most of the people I know in close in Northern VA, who attend private, do so for the "social" aspect.
Anonymous wrote:We have had students in both APS and private in middle and elementary school grades. The APS experience has been good, with enthusiastic and dedicated teachers. But the curriculum tends toward average. Private school is able to set a more challenging curriculum, and incorporate more writing and in-depth research projects. I've seen very few long-form writing assignments at APS. They write a short-answer essay question on a test, but never 5-7 page research paper with footnotes. Private requires writing in English and History classes, APS doesn't. Foreign language at our private is rigorous, and APS is much easier.
The social aspect is definitely a factor in our private. There is vast wealth and only a very level-headed child will be unmoved by the inequity within their class. That said, there is a sense of community at our school which is very inclusive to our students & families.
Anonymous wrote:Langley HS pyramid. Sent our children to private school from K-12.
Anonymous wrote:When you read through these responses, you see a lot of "we were afraid" of one thing or another about public school. Afraid of class size, afraid of mediocrity, "getting lost in the shuffle," etc. Private schools have built a business model around calming those anxieties, saying just why parents want to hear, giving lots of reassurance and lots of individual attention. And I'm not saying that's wrong. It works for many families, and it calms their anxieties.
But be aware of the new and different anxieties you and your child may encounter as well: the worry of financial strain, not fitting in with the cliques in the new school, not measuring up athletically or academically, being self-conscious of not being wealthy enough, being asked to get tutors and psychological testing for not measuring up to expectations, and this last one isn't an anxiety but a risk: of becoming entitled.
I have been a student and a staff member in both public and private schools and these are just my thoughts. Private schools can look like a great relief from parental anxiety but there are many anxieties hidden under the surface too.