Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think most people send their kids to selective private in hopes of securing admission to elite colleges.
They send them seeking a better education than they would have received in public school and hope that education will prepare them to succeed at whatever college they attend.
Ok, so, my kid is at a HYP. She went to a middle of the road public school. Her current roommate went to a top 5 BS. DD has been tutoring her in both Calculus and Chem…she is NOT prepared for the scions whatsoever. Anecdotal, yes, but don't think that private HSs are good at everything, bc they are not necessarily better than your local public
All this means is that you don't have to be that smart to get into HYP if you came from a great school. It actually completely reinforces the myth the OP is trying break.
Anonymous wrote:My reason for private: they expel behavior problems, they fire burnt-out, lazy teachers, they keep parents informed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My reason for private: they expel behavior problems, they fire burnt-out, lazy teachers, they keep parents informed.
+1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think most people send their kids to selective private in hopes of securing admission to elite colleges.
They send them seeking a better education than they would have received in public school and hope that education will prepare them to succeed at whatever college they attend.
Ok, so, my kid is at a HYP. She went to a middle of the road public school. Her current roommate went to a top 5 BS. DD has been tutoring her in both Calculus and Chem…she is NOT prepared for the scions whatsoever. Anecdotal, yes, but don't think that private HSs are good at everything, bc they are not necessarily better than your local public
Anonymous wrote:Talk about the pot calling the kettle black.
"The only thing I can take away from your story is that you have a chip on your shoulder. So I'm not inclined to put much merit into what you want to believe."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to a highly selective LAC (AWS), and found that the students who went to excellent independent schools (not parochial schools) were far better prepared academically than the kids who went to public schools for the first year or so of college. Many of the public schools kids had never written a paper longer than 5 pages or had to read a novel a week. Many of the independent school kids (including the BS ones) had already written at least a couple of 20-page papers, used to 4-6 hours of homework nightly, and were fast readers. HOWEVER, by the end of four years, you could not tell the difference.
I find it odd that so many posters were paying such close attention to where their classmates went to high schools
and thus how academically prepared they were for college. I'm sure that this is not a subject I gave a second's thought to when I was in college.
Anonymous wrote:My reason for private: they expel behavior problems, they fire burnt-out, lazy teachers, they keep parents informed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is a BS, as in top 5 BS?
I presume he/she was talking about boarding school.
And used an anecdotal experience with one graduate of a boarding school to make a blanket assumption of all boarding school kids.
And now I will offer mine. I went to a private school. Went to Ivy. Roommate was from a public school. I was far better prepared and basically taught her how to write proper essays and research papers. If it weren’t for me she’d have flunked out. Therefore public schools are terrible and should be avoided at all costs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Frankly, the reason parents spend $40k/year for a top private school is the education they receive K-12, not future college admissions. And the students who do the best are "intellectual" in ways that run-of-the-mill public schools just don't even try to meet. The basic public school curriculum just doesn't come close to the humanities and social science at my DC's school.
No, frankly the reason parents chose to spend $40k for private is to make "connections" and separate their children from the unwashed masses.
Sigh. There is nothing anyone could say that would change your mind about this.
Anonymous wrote:Poster with the story here. Back in college, I did believe that BS kids were more likely to be slackers with inflated SAT scores. Now it has become clear that the BS taught my roommate how to survive in the real world with the least effort. Colleges know that BS students have learned this efficiency and every year they seek out and admit a group of student who are really good at this skill. They want these really efficient "slackers" to kick the #$%#$# out of sheltered grinds like I was in college so the grinds can reach higher levels than they would by only working harder.
"Do you have comprehension issues? It's clear the point was that BS kids are a bunch of slackers who can prep for an SAT but can't function in college STEM classes."
Anonymous wrote:I think it's so funny that people think DC privates are on the same level as selective BSs. No one outside of DC has even heard of these local schools. You're wasting your money.