Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's interesting how so many parents in this thread don't want to send their kids to private because they don't want their child to be around snooty private school people, but yet are insufferably smug about that fact. LOL.
I didn't know that "I send my children to public schools" (or even "I send my children to public schools even though I could afford private") is smug at all, let alone insufferably smug.
Oh please. Have you read this thread?
Yes, I don't know who is smugger, the public school parents patting themselves on the back for toughening up their kids in the rough and tumble world of JKLM or MCPS, or the private school parents banging on endlessly about their "Big 3" and comparing matriculation stats down to the third decimal place.
Both sides seems to feel that in order for them to really feel like they made the right decision, the alternative has to be wrong.
Thank God the kids generally have more sense.
I'm just happy my kids are getting top notch educations and, other than taxes, I'm not paying out the ass for it.
+1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's interesting how so many parents in this thread don't want to send their kids to private because they don't want their child to be around snooty private school people, but yet are insufferably smug about that fact. LOL.
I didn't know that "I send my children to public schools" (or even "I send my children to public schools even though I could afford private") is smug at all, let alone insufferably smug.
Oh please. Have you read this thread?
Yes, I don't know who is smugger, the public school parents patting themselves on the back for toughening up their kids in the rough and tumble world of JKLM or MCPS, or the private school parents banging on endlessly about their "Big 3" and comparing matriculation stats down to the third decimal place.
Both sides seems to feel that in order for them to really feel like they made the right decision, the alternative has to be wrong.
Thank God the kids generally have more sense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's interesting how so many parents in this thread don't want to send their kids to private because they don't want their child to be around snooty private school people, but yet are insufferably smug about that fact. LOL.
I didn't know that "I send my children to public schools" (or even "I send my children to public schools even though I could afford private") is smug at all, let alone insufferably smug.
Oh please. Have you read this thread?
Anonymous wrote:Top of the class triple Ivy League grad (only the best Ivies of course, not those second rate Ivies like Dartmouth, MIT, or (ugh!) Cornell, with a seven-figure income and - of course- fully funded college savings accounts and retirement funds.
Of course, I want to say I support the public schools, but I do worry about my gifted, talented, precious, and delightful DC being in contact with the groundlings in their highly-rated public school. And heaven forbid that I am forced to interact with parents of these students if they are not HHI Ivy League grads. And I also want to make sure that DC has time for karate, band, language lessons in four different languages (each dialect of course!), and three different sports after school.
My solution was to send DC to public schools, but he is under strict instructions to not speak to, touch, or interact in any way with other children whose parents are not HHI Ivy League grads just like my wife Muffy and I.
Anonymous wrote:Top of the class triple Ivy League grad (only the best Ivies of course, not those second rate Ivies like Dartmouth, MIT, or (ugh!) Cornell, with a seven-figure income and - of course- fully funded college savings accounts and retirement funds.
Of course, I want to say I support the public schools, but I do worry about my gifted, talented, precious, and delightful DC being in contact with the groundlings in their highly-rated public school. And heaven forbid that I am forced to interact with parents of these students if they are not HHI Ivy League grads. And I also want to make sure that DC has time for karate, band, language lessons in four different languages (each dialect of course!), and three different sports after school.
My solution was to send DC to public schools, but he is under strict instructions to not speak to, touch, or interact in any way with other children whose parents are not HHI Ivy League grads just like my wife Muffy and I.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's interesting how so many parents in this thread don't want to send their kids to private because they don't want their child to be around snooty private school people, but yet are insufferably smug about that fact. LOL.
I didn't know that "I send my children to public schools" (or even "I send my children to public schools even though I could afford private") is smug at all, let alone insufferably smug.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like we are all in are something that the private schoolers just don't get.
Does everyone who send their kids to public school speak this incoherently? Maybe I should take a poll.
If you went to an Ivy League school and send your child to public, yet can't string a sentence together, please post here.
Anonymous wrote:No Ivies here but we do have a high HHI (600k+ depending on bonuses). Anyway, we do public because we believe in the purpose of public education, the school they go to is decent, and also because we want our children to realize they are NOT the center of the universe and that the only way they're going to get somewhere in life is through their own hard work. DH strongly believes they are more likely to learn the value of perseverance at a public school.
Not in the DC area anymore (moved to NYC a few years ago). Hoping kids will pass into one of the magnates for HS. IMO, none of the NYC privates are as good as Stuy or Bronx Sci.
Anonymous wrote:Ivy grad, HHI right at $350K. Use a JKLM public and hope to use DCPS through high school.
Anonymous wrote:The illuminating thing for me about this thread is the apparent proportion of graduates of Ivy League colleges who married graduates of Ivy League colleges. Maybe I should start a thread -- did you graduate from an Ivy League college and NOT marry another Ivy Leaguer?