Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do these posters claiming that all public elementaries are violent and terrible have actual experiences with public?
We have a 2nd grader in a "well-regarded" public school and have never encountered any violent or troubling behavior. We had one teacher we didn't love and that year was tough, but private schools also have a range of teachers and not all of them are the right fit for your child. Overall our experience at the public school has been really great and we like the teachers, administrators, other families and the kids themselves.
I'm sure private schools offer better services in some respects and they may be more responsive to parents since, after all, you are paying them. We'd consider private if we were ever unhappy with the public option, and we're certainly looking seriously at it for MS because I understand there are behavioral issues at our IB MS.
But after 2+ years in public, I can say honestly that it has in fact been a nurturing, positive environment, and we're glad for the school community in the neighborhood, and our kid has lots of wonderful friends. And we've saved thousands of dollars over going the private route, and that's not nothing.
Yes. And I would have sounded like you in elementary.
Public middle school in our supposedly good district was an entirely different matter. My oldest unfortunately went through it until we pulled him. The experience was not good.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your glorification of the public school is delusional. Wait until you get a load of the violence and horrible behavior before you decide your public is “nurturing.” Lol.
I get that you don’t want to drive that much…that’s your only argument with merit.
Houses in our school zone start at $2mm, and there is 0% free lunch population. I am not worried about violence or dangerous behavior.
Materialism and bullying perhaps, but I imagine these issues are also present at the private school. Probably even more so, since the parents live in an area like this and still choose to shell out $50k/yr per kid for the private school experience.
Anonymous wrote:As others have said, elementary is fine for public. It’s middle school where things go way down hill. Ask me how I know.
Anonymous wrote:I agree with your DH but as a compromise:
I’d start at public and reevaluate for middle school, as someone else said. Also be very aware that admission/entry to private is generally far more difficult later on (while entry in K is easy).
Also be aware that neighborhood culture, mom friends etc- while wonderful during the early years- becomes a lot less relevant by mid-elementary or so. By then, all the parents will be back to work FT and families spending their weekends on travel sports. There will be exceptions, but not many.
Anonymous wrote:There is no such thing as a top-public. It's all a sales pitch to get you to spend more on a house. Do what is best for your kids.