Anonymous wrote:The grading scale? Everyone knows about the different grading scale as it is discussed as naseum. The college admissions committee is also aware of it so it is not the negative factor it is presented to be.
Once you get to a top college, there are private school kids that are well prepared and motivated and excel, and there are public school students that do exactly the same. And some from both groups struggle as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m the OP, and I’ll come clean. Yes, I am (was) a public school parent. But it was entirely and deliberately by choice. We had more than enough money to pay for private, and our kids had the smarts and we had the connections to get them into a good one, but honestly we couldn’t stomach the idea because we dreaded the thought of having to mix with the parent community. The incessant references to the “Big 3” on this board only reinforces that our decision was the right one.
I also wonder what these folks are paying for. I always thought that one of the key benefits of paying tens of thousands of dollars a year for a top DMV private was better college counseling. I can understand public school parents having to resort to a forum like this for college admissions advice, but is it really necessary for a Big 3 parent? I’m guessing it’s not - it couldn’t possibly be! - but that those parents who come here anyway are simply too anxious about the whole process and too embarrassed to approach their schools directly. Is that what’s going on?
Of course, many Big 3 parents will argue that they didn’t send their kids there for college admissions / counseling purposes but for the education, but we all know that’s not true. I mean, sure they care about the education but, at least in part, they care because of college. So you can’t separate the two.
Except it was YOU as a non so-called Big3 parent, who did this. Think about it. Do you really think "Big3" parents post all of these "big 3" threads on this website?
Look in the mirror, hun.
OP here. I honestly don’t understand the point you’re trying to make.
OP here. Obviously I recognize that parents in either setting aren’t a monolith, although I’d suggest that using a so-called “W” school as an example of a typical public school is laughable.
What jumps out at me on this forum is that, however broadly or narrowly one defines the Big 3, the student population there is a tiny fraction of high school students in the DMV. Every Big 3 senior class combined is probably smaller than a single class at a typical DMV public high school. Yet, self-identifying Big 3 parents appear to pipe in in every single thread. It happens frequently enough to allow one to generalize about the parent population with some degree of confidence, wouldn’t you say?
Anonymous wrote:I’m the OP, and I’ll come clean. Yes, I am (was) a public school parent. But it was entirely and deliberately by choice. We had more than enough money to pay for private, and our kids had the smarts and we had the connections to get them into a good one, but honestly we couldn’t stomach the idea because we dreaded the thought of having to mix with the parent community. The incessant references to the “Big 3” on this board only reinforces that our decision was the right one.
I also wonder what these folks are paying for. I always thought that one of the key benefits of paying tens of thousands of dollars a year for a top DMV private was better college counseling. I can understand public school parents having to resort to a forum like this for college admissions advice, but is it really necessary for a Big 3 parent? I’m guessing it’s not - it couldn’t possibly be! - but that those parents who come here anyway are simply too anxious about the whole process and too embarrassed to approach their schools directly. Is that what’s going on?
Of course, many Big 3 parents will argue that they didn’t send their kids there for college admissions / counseling purposes but for the education, but we all know that’s not true. I mean, sure they care about the education but, at least in part, they care because of college. So you can’t separate the two.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m the OP, and I’ll come clean. Yes, I am (was) a public school parent. But it was entirely and deliberately by choice. We had more than enough money to pay for private, and our kids had the smarts and we had the connections to get them into a good one, but honestly we couldn’t stomach the idea because we dreaded the thought of having to mix with the parent community. The incessant references to the “Big 3” on this board only reinforces that our decision was the right one.
I also wonder what these folks are paying for. I always thought that one of the key benefits of paying tens of thousands of dollars a year for a top DMV private was better college counseling. I can understand public school parents having to resort to a forum like this for college admissions advice, but is it really necessary for a Big 3 parent? I’m guessing it’s not - it couldn’t possibly be! - but that those parents who come here anyway are simply too anxious about the whole process and too embarrassed to approach their schools directly. Is that what’s going on?
Of course, many Big 3 parents will argue that they didn’t send their kids there for college admissions / counseling purposes but for the education, but we all know that’s not true. I mean, sure they care about the education but, at least in part, they care because of college. So you can’t separate the two.
Thanks for your honesty, OP. There are lots of reasons to choose privates and lots of reasons to choose public school. It sounds like you made a good choice for your family. My kids are at private and are happy so that choice works for us. Being at the end of this journey, I think the best parts for my kid have been the teachers, his friends and the traditions - but I happily admit there are great teachers, kids and traditions and lots of other public and private schools.
As to why a private school parent comes on this board, I have gotten some off-the-record tidbits that I wouldn’t get from the CCO. And, sometimes I ask what I deem a silly question that I will try to figure out myself before emailing the CCO. Actually, I have never emailed the CCO - I try to save that for my kid to do as he is driving this train … but sometimes this board assures me he is on the right track.I can’t imagine those reasons are specific to private school parents.
And I too, dislike the term “big 3” as I find it pretentious and unhelpful as there are significant differences between privates. But I admit, it is a quick shorthand, and therefore occasionally useful in realizing my kid’s grading scale or whatever is different than what another poster is mentioning. I don’t think anyone would use it in conversation.
Like any community I have been a part of, private schools have stereotypical jerks but also fundamentally good humans that I feel grateful to know. I don’t think you can lump us all together any more than I would lump together all the parents at your kid’s school.
Your response makes me believe you see differences between posters when you come to this board but I am usually left feeling that we are all more alike than different - parents simply trying to do the best they can (with an occasional prankster high school troll).
Anonymous wrote:^ OP, I typed a long response to your post, which I find so misguided in so many ways. Instead, I decided to just point out your most glaring misconception. We have had kids in both public and in a private you refer to as a big three (while at the same time denigrating others for using that term). There are difficult/anxious/obnoxious parents in both settings. The two most intense, helicoptering parents (by a lot!) that I know are parents in our W cluster (another DCUM term that should equally offend you). Similarly , there are great parents in both settings. You describe private school parents as a monolith, which is no more true than to say that all public school parents are like you. It’s disappointing that an adult doesn’t know better, because then who is teaching kids to refrain from such generalizations and judgments?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m the OP, and I’ll come clean. Yes, I am (was) a public school parent. But it was entirely and deliberately by choice. We had more than enough money to pay for private, and our kids had the smarts and we had the connections to get them into a good one, but honestly we couldn’t stomach the idea because we dreaded the thought of having to mix with the parent community. The incessant references to the “Big 3” on this board only reinforces that our decision was the right one.
I also wonder what these folks are paying for. I always thought that one of the key benefits of paying tens of thousands of dollars a year for a top DMV private was better college counseling. I can understand public school parents having to resort to a forum like this for college admissions advice, but is it really necessary for a Big 3 parent? I’m guessing it’s not - it couldn’t possibly be! - but that those parents who come here anyway are simply too anxious about the whole process and too embarrassed to approach their schools directly. Is that what’s going on?
Of course, many Big 3 parents will argue that they didn’t send their kids there for college admissions / counseling purposes but for the education, but we all know that’s not true. I mean, sure they care about the education but, at least in part, they care because of college. So you can’t separate the two.
Except it was YOU as a non so-called Big3 parent, who did this. Think about it. Do you really think "Big3" parents post all of these "big 3" threads on this website?
Look in the mirror, hun.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m the OP, and I’ll come clean. Yes, I am (was) a public school parent. But it was entirely and deliberately by choice. We had more than enough money to pay for private, and our kids had the smarts and we had the connections to get them into a good one, but honestly we couldn’t stomach the idea because we dreaded the thought of having to mix with the parent community. The incessant references to the “Big 3” on this board only reinforces that our decision was the right one.
I also wonder what these folks are paying for. I always thought that one of the key benefits of paying tens of thousands of dollars a year for a top DMV private was better college counseling. I can understand public school parents having to resort to a forum like this for college admissions advice, but is it really necessary for a Big 3 parent? I’m guessing it’s not - it couldn’t possibly be! - but that those parents who come here anyway are simply too anxious about the whole process and too embarrassed to approach their schools directly. Is that what’s going on?
Of course, many Big 3 parents will argue that they didn’t send their kids there for college admissions / counseling purposes but for the education, but we all know that’s not true. I mean, sure they care about the education but, at least in part, they care because of college. So you can’t separate the two.
Thanks for your honesty, OP. There are lots of reasons to choose privates and lots of reasons to choose public school. It sounds like you made a good choice for your family. My kids are at private and are happy so that choice works for us. Being at the end of this journey, I think the best parts for my kid have been the teachers, his friends and the traditions - but I happily admit there are great teachers, kids and traditions and lots of other public and private schools.
As to why a private school parent comes on this board, I have gotten some off-the-record tidbits that I wouldn’t get from the CCO. And, sometimes I ask what I deem a silly question that I will try to figure out myself before emailing the CCO. Actually, I have never emailed the CCO - I try to save that for my kid to do as he is driving this train … but sometimes this board assures me he is on the right track.I can’t imagine those reasons are specific to private school parents.
And I too, dislike the term “big 3” as I find it pretentious and unhelpful as there are significant differences between privates. But I admit, it is a quick shorthand, and therefore occasionally useful in realizing my kid’s grading scale or whatever is different than what another poster is mentioning. I don’t think anyone would use it in conversation.
Like any community I have been a part of, private schools have stereotypical jerks but also fundamentally good humans that I feel grateful to know. I don’t think you can lump us all together any more than I would lump together all the parents at your kid’s school.
Your response makes me believe you see differences between posters when you come to this board but I am usually left feeling that we are all more alike than different - parents simply trying to do the best they can (with an occasional prankster high school troll).
Anonymous wrote:I’m the OP, and I’ll come clean. Yes, I am (was) a public school parent. But it was entirely and deliberately by choice. We had more than enough money to pay for private, and our kids had the smarts and we had the connections to get them into a good one, but honestly we couldn’t stomach the idea because we dreaded the thought of having to mix with the parent community. The incessant references to the “Big 3” on this board only reinforces that our decision was the right one.
I also wonder what these folks are paying for. I always thought that one of the key benefits of paying tens of thousands of dollars a year for a top DMV private was better college counseling. I can understand public school parents having to resort to a forum like this for college admissions advice, but is it really necessary for a Big 3 parent? I’m guessing it’s not - it couldn’t possibly be! - but that those parents who come here anyway are simply too anxious about the whole process and too embarrassed to approach their schools directly. Is that what’s going on?
Of course, many Big 3 parents will argue that they didn’t send their kids there for college admissions / counseling purposes but for the education, but we all know that’s not true. I mean, sure they care about the education but, at least in part, they care because of college. So you can’t separate the two.
Anonymous wrote:I’m the OP, and I’ll come clean. Yes, I am (was) a public school parent. But it was entirely and deliberately by choice. We had more than enough money to pay for private, and our kids had the smarts and we had the connections to get them into a good one, but honestly we couldn’t stomach the idea because we dreaded the thought of having to mix with the parent community. The incessant references to the “Big 3” on this board only reinforces that our decision was the right one.
I also wonder what these folks are paying for. I always thought that one of the key benefits of paying tens of thousands of dollars a year for a top DMV private was better college counseling. I can understand public school parents having to resort to a forum like this for college admissions advice, but is it really necessary for a Big 3 parent? I’m guessing it’s not - it couldn’t possibly be! - but that those parents who come here anyway are simply too anxious about the whole process and too embarrassed to approach their schools directly. Is that what’s going on?
Of course, many Big 3 parents will argue that they didn’t send their kids there for college admissions / counseling purposes but for the education, but we all know that’s not true. I mean, sure they care about the education but, at least in part, they care because of college. So you can’t separate the two.
I can’t imagine those reasons are specific to private school parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ugh - what a noxious thread. Very glad we steered clear of private school.
I got the feeling a public school parents started this…