Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, it is not simple. You should do a real assessment of your finances and be honest with yourself about what year you can afford to start and begin applying in that year.
This will also force you to evaluate whether or not you can even afford the option at all.
OP here. We have a HHI of $750k or higher (depending on bonuses and stock performance). Our current PITI is <$3k with a mortgage we could pay off tomorrow if we wanted to, but we don't because it's 3.5%. For us the money is there, we just have to decide if we want to spend it on private school for 2 kids or a mortgage on a new pricey house with a good in bounds. We're genuinely very torn. We love our DC public and aren't very competitive people, we just want our kids to be happy, well rounded, and reasonably challenged academically.
So it's less about whether the money is there and more about whether this is how we want to spend it. This thread has been really helpful though, so thank you so much to everyone who has taken the time to reply.
I truly don't understand why you would muck around with DCPS or public charters past like 3rd grade. I am also not a competitive person and I get not wanting to send kids to Big 3 type environments. But there are lots of private schools that have nurturing environments with strong academics and basically none of the random BS you find in even the best DCPS schools. I guess it's nice to send kids to a neighborhood school and to have friends in the neighborhood. So maybe you do that for PK and a couple years of elementary. But especially on CH people will start peeling off for private or charters like Latin or BASIS by late elementary anyway. So why wait for that to happen when it might impact your ability to get into the school you want -- just go.
This is not a know on DCPS but I just can't imagine rolling the dice in this way by waiting if you know that you're going to want private anyway and can definitely afford it. I also think you will quickly discover that neighborhood schools are overrated in DC as a source of friendship-- people are super transient anyway and the lottery means classmates might not even live nearby plus you would be surprised by how easy it is to maintain a neighborhood friendship while kids attend different schools.
OP here and I know this sounds crazy but the truth is we're just happy where we are, and we'd rather not. I KNOW that one day I might regret this but it's really hard to make this huge change to our finances, uproot our kids, and add whatever commute to our daily lives, because we're trying to avoid some theoretical future pain. Our lives feel so easy and, to be honest, perfect right now. Of course the threat of ~3rd/4th grade is looming over our heads, but it still makes it hard to pull the parachute right now. I'm not saying I'm right, I'm just explaining where we're at. We keep saying "one more year" and that has turned into 3 years. And maybe one more, who is to say. You could also argue that we should just sell our house and move to upper NW and probably we should, but the god honest answer is we don't want to. We like it where we are and, most of all, we like the financial flexibility that our current lifestyle gives us. It's probably immature of us but that's what it is.
Anonymous wrote:It can be that simple, OP! Please check out Christ Episcopal in Rockville. It's religious but "religious light" and super inclusive of all walks of life
It's only K-8 but so it would only get you though middle. We are extremely happy there!!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi,
I live in a part of DC with decent elementary schools but bad middle and high schools. Something I hear casually said among the other parents at our elementary school is that they might "just go private" for middle or high school.
Is it really that straightforward? Are there just tons of private schools with openings in 6th grade? I think my fear is that we count on that and then end up not getting in anywhere. And what kind of criteria do they use to admit kids? Is it based on the kid's academic / extracurricular performance? Do siblings get in automatically?
I guess I just need a complete primer on privates. Thank you for any info and for taking pity on a total novice.
It's a striver wannabe / miser thing to say. Nobody who can afford private primary says this. And it's deluded because you can't make up for lost time. k-6th is 7 pivotal years of life. Your kid is not on the same rung when they transfer in at age 12 or 13; from academics, to socially, and everything in-between.
This is true. Last year I had an 8th grader and a 9th grader transfer into a top local private that costs over 50 grand per student from public. Both got straight A’s in public, were in a gifted program where they took all academic courses, and still had to adjust to the harder workload. Socially they were okay.
Anonymous wrote:Hi,
I live in a part of DC with decent elementary schools but bad middle and high schools. Something I hear casually said among the other parents at our elementary school is that they might "just go private" for middle or high school.
Is it really that straightforward? Are there just tons of private schools with openings in 6th grade? I think my fear is that we count on that and then end up not getting in anywhere. And what kind of criteria do they use to admit kids? Is it based on the kid's academic / extracurricular performance? Do siblings get in automatically?
I guess I just need a complete primer on privates. Thank you for any info and for taking pity on a total novice.
Anonymous wrote:There’s also Norwood, light Episcopal St pats and Washington Episcopal, and St Andrews
Anonymous wrote:My kids transferred from DCPS to Big3 schools (two different ones) in 9th grade. One graduated in the top 10 kids in their class and is now at a top 10 university and the second is on target to do so.
It's definitely possible to do this. We are nobody special and our kids are smart but not genius or prodigy level or anything like that. We didn't do any supplementation throughout elementary or middle school (we're really not tiger parents at all--we left for private because our inboundary high school is really lacking.)
The first semester of 9th grade was a major step up but we watched their grades very carefully and had tutors ready to go. After that they were on their own and just took off. They fit in super well socially. That was not an issue at all. The left (or are leaving) with life-long friendships.
Our story is not everyone's story but there are plenty of families like us out there.
Anonymous wrote:OP: Forums like this are full of public school trolls who can't afford private who bad mouth private and overhype how amazing and diverse publics are. And it sounds like your social circle is currently rah-rah public school parents (who can't afford private). Nobody calls their baby ugly. If private primary schools were a pointless waste of money the good ones wouldn't all have waitlists, competitive admission, and cost a pretty penny. You know what I mean?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There’s also Norwood, light Episcopal St pats and Washington Episcopal, and St Andrews
OP said no religious schools. St. Pats, WES and St. Andrews are all Episcopal and religious. I know some people on DCUM hear “no religious schools” and think it is a euphemism for “no Catholic schools” and assume liberal WASPY religions like Quaker and Episcopal are fine. Such bigots.
Anonymous wrote:There’s also Norwood, light Episcopal St pats and Washington Episcopal, and St Andrews
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some people are active in their church and move their kid to their parish school after elementary school.
Some apply out after 3rd to schools that start / have expansion in 4th.
I do not know anyone who had realistic expectations who got "shut-out"
That's good to hear. I think our expectations are realistic although I don't want to send my kids to a religious school - will that eliminate a lot of the options?
I don't really care about getting into the "best" school, I just want a middle and high school option for my kids that is safe and academically challenging.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We did not send our kids to private school because we did not feel that STEM education was rigorous enough for our high achieving kids. Of course, magnet public schools in those days were highly competitive and difficult to get into. Couple that with our race, we knew that we would be discriminated for admissions. So, we decided to buy or rent an apartment in a good school pyramid. Thankfully, kids got into magnet schools and got superb STEM and Humanities education from 4th grade to 12th.
Interesting. Well I’m glad your kids were able to avoid the discrimination in the pyramid which it didn’t exist.
How’d you happen to find yourself in this private/independent school forum?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi,
I live in a part of DC with decent elementary schools but bad middle and high schools. Something I hear casually said among the other parents at our elementary school is that they might "just go private" for middle or high school.
Is it really that straightforward? Are there just tons of private schools with openings in 6th grade? I think my fear is that we count on that and then end up not getting in anywhere. And what kind of criteria do they use to admit kids? Is it based on the kid's academic / extracurricular performance? Do siblings get in automatically?
I guess I just need a complete primer on privates. Thank you for any info and for taking pity on a total novice.
This is such a prole tell. Do y’all REALLY think there’s no difference between private school lifers and transfer kids who only go from 7-12th or 9-12th? Of course you don’t. You’re trying to rationalize being a cheapskate.
The biggest difference is that the people who come in as transfers aren't jerks.