Anonymous wrote:
+1. If your only goal is to get your kid into a great college - public school is totally sufficient and schools like Hunter and Stuy very regularly send massive quantities of children to ivy leagues. With private K-12, your college outcome might not be different but your kid will be more well-spoken and a bit more equipped for coastal elite life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dalton, Trinity, Horace Mann, Fieldston, and St. Ann's are the best private schools. Some would also toss Brearley and Collegiate in there. A new money child will need IQ scores in the top 2-3% to get in, though, unless you are a celebrity. Cast a wide net to include Columbia Grammar, Berkeley Carroll, Brooklyn Friends, Riverdale Country, Little Red Schoolhouse/ ELizabeth Irwin etc.
Skip Birch Wathen Lenox.
The public magnets, like Hunter, Anderson, and Stuyvesant may be better schools in terms of peer group brainpower.
Public school mom here. Skip the public Citywides (Anderson, NESTm), which now just have lottery admissions and have essentially been scalped by the DOE (NESTm has a nice high school but it is not "gifted" - they're actually better known for special ed support). Hunter & Stuy are filled with brainiacs but are brutally competitive and offer virtually no college support. If I had endless resources I'd choose a private K-12.
Anonymous wrote:Who is testing the IQ of their 5 year old?? That seems insane to me
Anonymous wrote:
Public school mom here. Skip the public Citywides (Anderson, NESTm), which now just have lottery admissions and have essentially been scalped by the DOE (NESTm has a nice high school but it is not "gifted" - they're actually better known for special ed support). Hunter & Stuy are filled with brainiacs but are brutally competitive and offer virtually no college support. If I had endless resources I'd choose a private K-12.
Anonymous wrote:Dalton, Trinity, Horace Mann, Fieldston, and St. Ann's are the best private schools. Some would also toss Brearley and Collegiate in there. A new money child will need IQ scores in the top 2-3% to get in, though, unless you are a celebrity. Cast a wide net to include Columbia Grammar, Berkeley Carroll, Brooklyn Friends, Riverdale Country, Little Red Schoolhouse/ ELizabeth Irwin etc.
Skip Birch Wathen Lenox.
The public magnets, like Hunter, Anderson, and Stuyvesant may be better schools in terms of peer group brainpower.