Anonymous wrote:Put money in a 529. Don't waste it on nannies and private schools.
Anonymous wrote:This has to be one of the most pointless and impossible to answer questions ever. Your child is a human, not an investment. You can't apply some kind of market analysis to raising a human being.
Anonymous wrote:Not reading all these responses but this is a silky question. The answer depends on the specific school(s) and childcare providers. Some public schools are great; some suck. Same with private schools. Same with colleges. Same with nannies. Same with daycare. And it will vary by child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:An educated and experienced nanny without a doubt is worth the investment. The first five years are the most important and the first two years contain over 80% of the brain growth and synapses.
Agreed. A good nanny is priceless.
I agree 100%. A good nanny who narrates for, reads to, talks to and plays with your child is the most important investment you can make in your child's educational future.
Anonymous wrote:After just having high-caliber conversations with your kids at the dinner table, I would say:
#1: Invest in MS through HS. If your kid is going to a school where expectations are low, there's little chance to be creative, and the general culture is one of mediocrity, then I'd say get the heck out of Dodge. Sorry to say, IMO most DCPS fall into this category.Invest in knowing your kids' teachers, and try to help them get into the best classes with the best instructors from start to finish.
#2: Invest in educational experiences in the summer. Send your kid abroad to learn a foreign language; volunteer in the National Park Service; do Outward Bound; whatever. Note that the experiences don't have to be academic ones, but it ain't a ad idea to find university-based summer programs so your child grows up feeling like a college/university campus is familiar and "fits".
#3: Take a really great parenting class or see a family therapist if your relationship with your kid needs some sprucing up. Don't underestimate how important you are.
That's where I'd put my $$$.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:An educated and experienced nanny without a doubt is worth the investment. The first five years are the most important and the first two years contain over 80% of the brain growth and synapses.
Agreed. A good nanny is priceless.
Anonymous wrote:An educated and experienced nanny without a doubt is worth the investment. The first five years are the most important and the first two years contain over 80% of the brain growth and synapses.
Anonymous wrote:How does one measure the "return on investment" in one's children?