Anonymous wrote:Even when money was an issue we chose private schools for our children. It has been worth every penny. I firmly believe that our children are better educated than they would have been at our local public schools AND we very much appreciate that our children have been in schools where the families have similar value systems. Don't mistake value systems for diversity. The schools have been satisfactorily diverse (important to us because we are a multi-racial family and we wanted our children to feel like they belonged) but it is the similarity in values, social mores and ethics that have been the most important to us. We would have paid any amount of money for our children to be in the private schools we chose for them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Even when money was an issue we chose private schools for our children. It has been worth every penny. I firmly believe that our children are better educated than they would have been at our local public schools AND we very much appreciate that our children have been in schools where the families have similar value systems. Don't mistake value systems for diversity. The schools have been satisfactorily diverse (important to us because we are a multi-racial family and we wanted our children to feel like they belonged) but it is the similarity in values, social mores and ethics that have been the most important to us. We would have paid any amount of money for our children to be in the private schools we chose for them.
Sounds like you have no idea about public in contrast to your private. My private is not better than public and yours may not be either.
I am a public school teacher. I have a very good idea about what our local public school is like.
Sure you are.
Anonymous wrote:HHI is over $1m annually and our kids all attend public shcool (excluding our preschooler). The only private school that is better than our local public school is a 40 minute drive each way, which is 80 minutes that they can spend doing other things, like music lessons, supplemental math (we use AoPS), and sports. I pay close attention to their school work so if things stop working at public school, we'll make a change, but for now, the opportunity cost of the long drive keeps us in public.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Even when money was an issue we chose private schools for our children. It has been worth every penny. I firmly believe that our children are better educated than they would have been at our local public schools AND we very much appreciate that our children have been in schools where the families have similar value systems. Don't mistake value systems for diversity. The schools have been satisfactorily diverse (important to us because we are a multi-racial family and we wanted our children to feel like they belonged) but it is the similarity in values, social mores and ethics that have been the most important to us. We would have paid any amount of money for our children to be in the private schools we chose for them.
Sounds like you have no idea about public in contrast to your private. My private is not better than public and yours may not be either.
I am a public school teacher. I have a very good idea about what our local public school is like.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Even when money was an issue we chose private schools for our children. It has been worth every penny. I firmly believe that our children are better educated than they would have been at our local public schools AND we very much appreciate that our children have been in schools where the families have similar value systems. Don't mistake value systems for diversity. The schools have been satisfactorily diverse (important to us because we are a multi-racial family and we wanted our children to feel like they belonged) but it is the similarity in values, social mores and ethics that have been the most important to us. We would have paid any amount of money for our children to be in the private schools we chose for them.
Sounds like you have no idea about public in contrast to your private. My private is not better than public and yours may not be either.
Anonymous wrote:Even when money was an issue we chose private schools for our children. It has been worth every penny. I firmly believe that our children are better educated than they would have been at our local public schools AND we very much appreciate that our children have been in schools where the families have similar value systems. Don't mistake value systems for diversity. The schools have been satisfactorily diverse (important to us because we are a multi-racial family and we wanted our children to feel like they belonged) but it is the similarity in values, social mores and ethics that have been the most important to us. We would have paid any amount of money for our children to be in the private schools we chose for them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If I lived in a smaller or less affluent town, yes, private.
But here? Nah. My kids don’t need to be surrounded only by super wealthy kids with helicopter moms, daily tutors and lessons, fancy spring break vacations, luxury cars in HS, etc.
What you describe is not what we are experiencing. In fact, our public school had much more of that than our current private school.
Anonymous wrote:If I lived in a smaller or less affluent town, yes, private.
But here? Nah. My kids don’t need to be surrounded only by super wealthy kids with helicopter moms, daily tutors and lessons, fancy spring break vacations, luxury cars in HS, etc.