Anonymous wrote:Yes absolutely. We only make $600k and our kids have attended both a top public and a top private school. The private school is just leaps and bounds better in so many ways. I had no idea what we were missing before. Yes it’s expensive but the cost is absolutely worth it to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. And we make multiples of that. But public school is an important value to us.
Similar here. Our HHI will be > 5mm this year, and we send our kids to MoCo public schools. While we aren't leading the PTO, we are regular volunteers at the school (one spouse with part time work far more than the other). It's the right community for our family, and we wouldn't change it.
While we make a lot now, one of us grew up poor/lower middle class, the other middle-middle class. MoCo public schools suit us well. Yes, not everything is absolutely "perfect." In our view, that is sort of the point--we think our kids learn a bit more resilience when not everything is always perfect.
I will admit though that one high-earning spouse's income provides an advantage that helps make public schools work for us: The spouse who works part-time is *super* involved with kids' homework, enrichment, etc. We joke that our kids have 100% of MoCo public plus 50% home school on top.
We have a $2.5m HHI and also send our kids to public. DH and I both grew up in middle class families so we also valued sending our kids to public. Now that our kids are getting older, I’m wondering if we should switch our kids to private for a better educational experience.
I wonder if my poor background has clouded my judgment on what is best for our kids. I drive myself and DH crazy thinking about where to send our 3 kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^ Also, you want your kids to learn resilience going to public school where they don’t coddle you… but then you have your spouse helicopter them. Kinda contradictory no?
Not the pp. I’m the 2.5m pp. We supplement. It feels everyone supplements at our UMC public. This is pretty standard.
Anonymous wrote:^ Also, you want your kids to learn resilience going to public school where they don’t coddle you… but then you have your spouse helicopter them. Kinda contradictory no?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. And we make multiples of that. But public school is an important value to us.
Similar here. Our HHI will be > 5mm this year, and we send our kids to MoCo public schools. While we aren't leading the PTO, we are regular volunteers at the school (one spouse with part time work far more than the other). It's the right community for our family, and we wouldn't change it.
While we make a lot now, one of us grew up poor/lower middle class, the other middle-middle class. MoCo public schools suit us well. Yes, not everything is absolutely "perfect." In our view, that is sort of the point--we think our kids learn a bit more resilience when not everything is always perfect.
I will admit though that one high-earning spouse's income provides an advantage that helps make public schools work for us: The spouse who works part-time is *super* involved with kids' homework, enrichment, etc. We joke that our kids have 100% of MoCo public plus 50% home school on top.
Anonymous wrote:We don't make that, so if that is the criteria for wanting the answer, then ignore what I'm saying. The reason I'm answering anyway is because we are very wealthy and retired young. We do not send our kids to private but could if we wanted to. I'm a former teacher and have a lot of friends who teach in both private and public as well as friends whose kids are in both private and public. We chose public based on all the information I know and have.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. And we make multiples of that. But public school is an important value to us.
Similar here. Our HHI will be > 5mm this year, and we send our kids to MoCo public schools. While we aren't leading the PTO, we are regular volunteers at the school (one spouse with part time work far more than the other). It's the right community for our family, and we wouldn't change it.
While we make a lot now, one of us grew up poor/lower middle class, the other middle-middle class. MoCo public schools suit us well. Yes, not everything is absolutely "perfect." In our view, that is sort of the point--we think our kids learn a bit more resilience when not everything is always perfect.
I will admit though that one high-earning spouse's income provides an advantage that helps make public schools work for us: The spouse who works part-time is *super* involved with kids' homework, enrichment, etc. We joke that our kids have 100% of MoCo public plus 50% home school on top.
I assume your children are in elementary school right? The home school / parent enrichment doesn’t work as well for middle and high school students. That’s when we sent ours to private!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. And we make multiples of that. But public school is an important value to us.
Similar here. Our HHI will be > 5mm this year, and we send our kids to MoCo public schools. While we aren't leading the PTO, we are regular volunteers at the school (one spouse with part time work far more than the other). It's the right community for our family, and we wouldn't change it.
While we make a lot now, one of us grew up poor/lower middle class, the other middle-middle class. MoCo public schools suit us well. Yes, not everything is absolutely "perfect." In our view, that is sort of the point--we think our kids learn a bit more resilience when not everything is always perfect.
I will admit though that one high-earning spouse's income provides an advantage that helps make public schools work for us: The spouse who works part-time is *super* involved with kids' homework, enrichment, etc. We joke that our kids have 100% of MoCo public plus 50% home school on top.