Anonymous wrote:Your child doesn’t need private school to be successful. That’s just a dcum myth.
Anonymous wrote:Seems like unless you are destitute or rich, you aren’t getting your kid into private school unless s/ he is utterly amazing, right? My DD was a strong candidate but I’m sure there were better. And I think our SES worked against us. This happens to us everywhere. Had to pull out from rec soccer because we can’t afford it but don’t qualify on paper for any financial aid. Yet some months I have to severely limit
Grocery shopping and can barely make bills. There’s no way to get ahead for the middle class.
Anonymous wrote:Our HHI is 500k and we chose not to put our three kids in private. It would not have been fiscally responsible for us to pay $120k/year for 14 years to attend schools that are not 40k better than our local schools. We can enrich them with so much more including tutors, travel, and fantastic camps.
Anonymous wrote:You CAN find housing and good public education...
Anonymous wrote:Whether they send their kids for only lower school, only middle school, or only high school, $40k/yr is a huge undertaking for many.
Anonymous wrote:The PP above actually posted some helpful links to nice properties. I think there is a Marc stop in Croton. That would get you good public schools at least.
My family’s HHI is $200k. Too much for financial aid, so the expensive privates are out. We can’t afford a huge mortgage and still save for college/retirement. Our local publics in Fairfax County are not great. We ended up putting our three kids in parochial.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My statement above was to say that many parents are spending beyond their means for private school when it is NOT necessary. Sending my kids to our neighborhood school just makes more fiscal sense to me.
But it's also quite disingenuous when you've apparently framed things as a false binary choice between "$120k/year for 14 years" and public school. There are tons of options in between the two.
Anonymous wrote:My statement above was to say that many parents are spending beyond their means for private school when it is NOT necessary. Sending my kids to our neighborhood school just makes more fiscal sense to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our HHI is 500k and we chose not to put our three kids in private. It would not have been fiscally responsible for us to pay $120k/year for 14 years to attend schools that are not 40k better than our local schools. We can enrich them with so much more including tutors, travel, and fantastic camps.
and driving luxury cars? to each its own, some don't mind spending on their kids education. What are they learning from camps anyways, apart from the usual sports activities that they engage in all the time
Anonymous wrote:Our HHI is 500k and we chose not to put our three kids in private. It would not have been fiscally responsible for us to pay $120k/year for 14 years to attend schools that are not 40k better than our local schools. We can enrich them with so much more including tutors, travel, and fantastic camps.
Anonymous wrote:We can enrich them with so much more including tutors, travel, and fantastic camps.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The PP above actually posted some helpful links to nice properties. I think there is a Marc stop in Croton. That would get you good public schools at least.
My family’s HHI is $200k. Too much for financial aid, so the expensive privates are out. We can’t afford a huge mortgage and still save for college/retirement. Our local publics in Fairfax County are not great. We ended up putting our three kids in parochial.
You are not lower middle class or even middle class and choose to have three kids. Your situation isn't comparable to someone lower middle class.
Anonymous wrote:My family’s HHI is $200k. Too much for financial aid, so the expensive privates are out. We can’t afford a huge mortgage and still save for college/retirement. Our local publics in Fairfax County are not great. We ended up putting our three kids in parochial.