Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are a lot of valid points here. OP's concern is valid. The high cost of private school (especially when not paid for by a third party) is valid and the desire to form a partnership is valid. What I wish, though, is that people could stop tearing others down. Calling someone something just makes people come across as judgemental and, frankly, no better off than the perceived offender.
What a namby-pamby, kumbaya response. You commit the same sin you accuse others of in your post. What you call "judgmental," I call having standards.
The muddled English of your post reflects your muddled thinking. The high cost of private school is valid for what? Does paying high tuition justify an attitude of entitlement in which schools are meant to jump at your every whim?
As someone who pays $120,000 in private school tuition each year, I disagree, and will continue to judge the people who think that way.
Anonymous wrote:There are a lot of valid points here. OP's concern is valid. The high cost of private school (especially when not paid for by a third party) is valid and the desire to form a partnership is valid. What I wish, though, is that people could stop tearing others down. Calling someone something just makes people come across as judgemental and, frankly, no better off than the perceived offender.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, she can and so can anyone else. You are a client of the school. Not the other way around. We easily switched to another very highly sought after school when we didn't feel the original school (often mentioned on this board as outstanding) was the right fit. The original school did everything to try to keep us - requested meetings, had parent association reach out, etc. - as it should be.
We are paying full tuition for multiple children and don't feel the need to settle. Private school is a choice and if it doesn't meet our expectations, we have other options.
The PP's mindset is the view of many parents -- a new approach to your child's education. Many parents see themselves as making a "purchase." They are "buying" something rather than investing in a partnership with the school. They hire house painters and household help, and they view themselves as hiring teachers too. They take a purely transactional approach to education. And if the child is not getting A's or having social or emotional problems (whatever the problem, in fact), they complain to "customer service." The parents do not see themselves as sharing responsibility for raising a child, but rather farming this off. This does not end well for the child, who needs parents to partner with the school -- and not to view the teacher as yet another hired hand whom they can order around.
I put several kids through private schools, and yes, it was expensive. But I found excellent schools and viewed myself as investing in a long-term partnership. I saw myself as partnering with teachers -- together we'd work on the tough task of developing my kids' potential. I saw those teachers as professionals and equals. Not as hired hands.
This is spot on (unfortunately).
-A teacher
As a parent who fully appreciates the demanding job teachers have, I am very sorry if this is indeed a prevalent attitude. Teachers rock!
The OP's entries throughout this thread reflect someone who is immature and narcissistic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It would help a lot if you would/could tell us the school and the grade.
Really? How could it help???
Um, not very bright, are we? Because if the school and grade were shared, we could tell you how the school handles welcoming new families.
Most wait until mid-summer. I confess I'm a buddy parent who hasn't reached out yet to my new family, because work has been incredibly hectic. I sincerely hope our buddy family is nothing like OP.
I imagine OP is equally hopeful that her buddy family isn't such a smug troll.
OP, your concern is entirely reasonable, but do have a little patience, some schools just roll out a little later than others. We have scheduled 2 playdates for our incoming already--our sister school has scheduled none yet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, she can and so can anyone else. You are a client of the school. Not the other way around. We easily switched to another very highly sought after school when we didn't feel the original school (often mentioned on this board as outstanding) was the right fit. The original school did everything to try to keep us - requested meetings, had parent association reach out, etc. - as it should be.
We are paying full tuition for multiple children and don't feel the need to settle. Private school is a choice and if it doesn't meet our expectations, we have other options.
The PP's mindset is the view of many parents -- a new approach to your child's education. Many parents see themselves as making a "purchase." They are "buying" something rather than investing in a partnership with the school. They hire house painters and household help, and they view themselves as hiring teachers too. They take a purely transactional approach to education. And if the child is not getting A's or having social or emotional problems (whatever the problem, in fact), they complain to "customer service." The parents do not see themselves as sharing responsibility for raising a child, but rather farming this off. This does not end well for the child, who needs parents to partner with the school -- and not to view the teacher as yet another hired hand whom they can order around.
I put several kids through private schools, and yes, it was expensive. But I found excellent schools and viewed myself as investing in a long-term partnership. I saw myself as partnering with teachers -- together we'd work on the tough task of developing my kids' potential. I saw those teachers as professionals and equals. Not as hired hands.
This is spot on (unfortunately).
-A teacher
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, she can and so can anyone else. You are a client of the school. Not the other way around. We easily switched to another very highly sought after school when we didn't feel the original school (often mentioned on this board as outstanding) was the right fit. The original school did everything to try to keep us - requested meetings, had parent association reach out, etc. - as it should be.
We are paying full tuition for multiple children and don't feel the need to settle. Private school is a choice and if it doesn't meet our expectations, we have other options.
The PP's mindset is the view of many parents -- a new approach to your child's education. Many parents see themselves as making a "purchase." They are "buying" something rather than investing in a partnership with the school. They hire house painters and household help, and they view themselves as hiring teachers too. They take a purely transactional approach to education. And if the child is not getting A's or having social or emotional problems (whatever the problem, in fact), they complain to "customer service." The parents do not see themselves as sharing responsibility for raising a child, but rather farming this off. This does not end well for the child, who needs parents to partner with the school -- and not to view the teacher as yet another hired hand whom they can order around.
I put several kids through private schools, and yes, it was expensive. But I found excellent schools and viewed myself as investing in a long-term partnership. I saw myself as partnering with teachers -- together we'd work on the tough task of developing my kids' potential. I saw those teachers as professionals and equals. Not as hired hands.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It would help a lot if you would/could tell us the school and the grade.
Really? How could it help???
Um, not very bright, are we? Because if the school and grade were shared, we could tell you how the school handles welcoming new families.
Most wait until mid-summer. I confess I'm a buddy parent who hasn't reached out yet to my new family, because work has been incredibly hectic. I sincerely hope our buddy family is nothing like OP.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, she can and so can anyone else. You are a client of the school. Not the other way around. We easily switched to another very highly sought after school when we didn't feel the original school (often mentioned on this board as outstanding) was the right fit. The original school did everything to try to keep us - requested meetings, had parent association reach out, etc. - as it should be.
We are paying full tuition for multiple children and don't feel the need to settle. Private school is a choice and if it doesn't meet our expectations, we have other options.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, she can and so can anyone else. You are a client of the school. Not the other way around. We easily switched to another very highly sought after school when we didn't feel the original school (often mentioned on this board as outstanding) was the right fit. The original school did everything to try to keep us - requested meetings, had parent association reach out, etc. - as it should be.
We are paying full tuition for multiple children and don't feel the need to settle. Private school is a choice and if it doesn't meet our expectations, we have other options.