Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to public school in the 70s and 80s, back when schools were focused on education, not indoctrination, and the kids (largely) had working fathers and SAHMs. In other words, those well-meaning teachers could actually focus on teaching children who were actually teachable. That is no longer the case, sadly, so I spend $60k/year to send my two DC to local private schools. We tried public here (Bethesda Elementary), which experiment lasted two years before we jumped ship for the good of my DC. We never looked back.
We really should have a tax deduction for money spent on private schools, like the home interest deduction.
Why? Private is a privilege. You already have tax dollars going to your public.
Why not? If a private school family leaves funds on the table and doesn't use a spot at a public school,
why can't That family use the unused funds at another school? I pay taxes for schools. If a school pulls in $8000 per student and my kids don't go why can't I use my tax dollars as I see fit? Same for homeschooling; homeschoolers should get a tax credit for that amount as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to public school in the 70s and 80s, back when schools were focused on education, not indoctrination, and the kids (largely) had working fathers and SAHMs. In other words, those well-meaning teachers could actually focus on teaching children who were actually teachable. That is no longer the case, sadly, so I spend $60k/year to send my two DC to local private schools. We tried public here (Bethesda Elementary), which experiment lasted two years before we jumped ship for the good of my DC. We never looked back.
We really should have a tax deduction for money spent on private schools, like the home interest deduction.
Why? Private is a privilege. You already have tax dollars going to your public.
Why not? If a private school family leaves funds on the table and doesn't use a spot at a public school,
why can't That family use the unused funds at another school? I pay taxes for schools. If a school pulls in $8000 per student and my kids don't go why can't I use my tax dollars as I see fit? Same for homeschooling; homeschoolers should get a tax credit for that amount as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to public school in the 70s and 80s, back when schools were focused on education, not indoctrination, and the kids (largely) had working fathers and SAHMs. In other words, those well-meaning teachers could actually focus on teaching children who were actually teachable. That is no longer the case, sadly, so I spend $60k/year to send my two DC to local private schools. We tried public here (Bethesda Elementary), which experiment lasted two years before we jumped ship for the good of my DC. We never looked back.
We really should have a tax deduction for money spent on private schools, like the home interest deduction.
Why? Private is a privilege. You already have tax dollars going to your public.
Why not? If a private school family leaves funds on the table and doesn't use a spot at a public school,
why can't That family use the unused funds at another school? I pay taxes for schools. If a school pulls in $8000 per student and my kids don't go why can't I use my tax dollars as I see fit? Same for homeschooling; homeschoolers should get a tax credit for that amount as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to public school in the 70s and 80s, back when schools were focused on education, not indoctrination, and the kids (largely) had working fathers and SAHMs. In other words, those well-meaning teachers could actually focus on teaching children who were actually teachable. That is no longer the case, sadly, so I spend $60k/year to send my two DC to local private schools. We tried public here (Bethesda Elementary), which experiment lasted two years before we jumped ship for the good of my DC. We never looked back.
We really should have a tax deduction for money spent on private schools, like the home interest deduction.
Why? Private is a privilege. You already have tax dollars going to your public.
Why not? If a private school family leaves funds on the table and doesn't use a spot at a public school,
why can't That family use the unused funds at another school? I pay taxes for schools. If a school pulls in $8000 per student and my kids don't go why can't I use my tax dollars as I see fit? Same for homeschooling; homeschoolers should get a tax credit for that amount as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to public school in the 70s and 80s, back when schools were focused on education, not indoctrination, and the kids (largely) had working fathers and SAHMs. In other words, those well-meaning teachers could actually focus on teaching children who were actually teachable. That is no longer the case, sadly, so I spend $60k/year to send my two DC to local private schools. We tried public here (Bethesda Elementary), which experiment lasted two years before we jumped ship for the good of my DC. We never looked back.
We really should have a tax deduction for money spent on private schools, like the home interest deduction.
Why? Private is a privilege. You already have tax dollars going to your public.
Anonymous wrote:I went to public school in the 70s and 80s, back when schools were focused on education, not indoctrination, and the kids (largely) had working fathers and SAHMs. In other words, those well-meaning teachers could actually focus on teaching children who were actually teachable. That is no longer the case, sadly, so I spend $60k/year to send my two DC to local private schools. We tried public here (Bethesda Elementary), which experiment lasted two years before we jumped ship for the good of my DC. We never looked back.
We really should have a tax deduction for money spent on private schools, like the home interest deduction.
Anonymous wrote:Just went through this last year for DS.
The question isn't "private v public" - there are far too many variables.
The question is "of the school choices available to my child which one would be the best for my child."
We toured, interviewed, talked to current and past parents and some students at four schools - our local public, the private where DS was last year, and two other privates.
Almost all of our concerns about public were unfounded. Some of the assumed benefits of the privates weren't really there or were easily replaceable.
Half way through the year at our local public and he is absolutely thriving. Happier than he's even been at school, learning a ton, and it's so great to be part of our neighborhood school community.
But that's all based on my individual kid and the options available within our commuting and financial reach.
Your decision needs to be based on the actual choices you have, not some philosophical agenda
Anonymous wrote:We spent close to a million dollars on private (~800,000) and I wish we had that money back. Kids made some nice friends and had some good teachers but I think they would have had similar good experiences in public. One child is in public now and we are happy with it. Private is maybe 10% better in some ways but also has drawbacks (too homogenous, less independence, too much stress about college). If I had unlimited funds, maybe, but I don't think it's worth the $ if funds are limited.
Anonymous wrote:Two of the MANY reasons we chose private that you cannot say publics provide:
Single sex education
Component of spirituality and morality
PLUS: Public schools are just a group of kids who happen to live in the same town/neighborhood. They (and their parents) are not in a school by choice. Hence the mediocrity that comes along with a public school education. The experience is just ordinary.
Anonymous wrote:Two of the MANY reasons we chose private that you cannot say publics provide:
Single sex education
Component of spirituality and morality
PLUS: Public schools are just a group of kids who happen to live in the same town/neighborhood. They (and their parents) are not in a school by choice. Hence the mediocrity that comes along with a public school education. The experience is just ordinary.
Anonymous wrote:Top rated AAP Center in FCPS, with first DC a TJ finalist. Why would we pay for private? I have yet to find one with the acadamic rigor of DC's MS.