Anonymous wrote:I sent mine to Catholic private for K-8; then public IB for high school.
If I little kids now, I would do ES bilingual ((I am zoned for Oakland Terrace). I missed the boat on that one. i would still do private for middle school, then IB program HS.
Anonymous wrote:I sent mine to Catholic private for K-8; then public IB for high school.
If I little kids now, I would do ES bilingual ((I am zoned for Oakland Terrace). I missed the boat on that one. i would still do private for middle school, then IB program HS.
Anonymous wrote:My sister taught in public schools for 25 years but she sent her laughter to private: K-5 charter, 6-8 Catholic, 9-12 private girls only.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Came across this article that mentioned a survey indicating that if given the choice 90% of public school teachers would send their kids to private school and am wondering how accurate that is in my own county.
‘Why I’m a Public School Teacher But a Private School Parent’
https://tenneyschool.com/why-im-a-public-school-teacher-but-a-private-school-parent/
Here’s another similar article but different author from a couple of years ago:
‘Why I’m a Public-School Teacher but a Private-School Parent’
https://www.theatlantic.com/education/archive/2015/03/why-im-a-public-school-teacher-but-a-private-school-parent/386797/
Do you think many public school teachers can afford $50k/year for private?
Most teachers make $80-120K so if their spouse makes a similar amount or more with aid or a catholic school they are fine.
My siblings kids went to catholic. They were always complaining about the indoctrination.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a single parent teacher whose kid goes to Catholic school. It’s doable. It is my priority (other than rent, food, etc) so it isn’t difficult.
If you are making $60-80K in this area it would be hard except if you are getting aid or the other parent helps financially.
Anonymous wrote:Any public school teacher or official who works for the system but doesn't send their own kids to MCPS is saying a lot about how they feel about the system.
Anonymous wrote:Came across this article that mentioned a survey indicating that if given the choice 90% of public school teachers would send their kids to private school and am wondering how accurate that is in my own county.
‘Why I’m a Public School Teacher But a Private School Parent’
https://tenneyschool.com/why-im-a-public-school-teacher-but-a-private-school-parent/
Here’s another similar article but different author from a couple of years ago:
‘Why I’m a Public-School Teacher but a Private-School Parent’
https://www.theatlantic.com/education/archive/2015/03/why-im-a-public-school-teacher-but-a-private-school-parent/386797/
Anonymous wrote:I’m a single parent teacher whose kid goes to Catholic school. It’s doable. It is my priority (other than rent, food, etc) so it isn’t difficult.