Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:wife went back to work after SAHM for 15 years, and a lot of sacrifices. tuition is just part of the equation, remember to add the social aspect of it, field trips, ski club, dance..(if u have a DD, this gets expensive, etc)..
How did she get a job?? I am trying to do this to be able to afford to send our second to private.
Someone I worked closely with in the early 90's, is now the VP of a tech firm and reached out to her. She had tons of tech experience, but none recent. Most of the big tech companies r either offshore, or r looking for young blood.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:wife went back to work after SAHM for 15 years, and a lot of sacrifices. tuition is just part of the equation, remember to add the social aspect of it, field trips, ski club, dance..(if u have a DD, this gets expensive, etc)..
How did she get a job?? I am trying to do this to be able to afford to send our second to private.
Anonymous wrote:OP again: we're also at mcps in one of the smallest elem schools in the district and kids have no special needs and are very adaptable... so, private would be a total luxury.
Anonymous wrote:wife went back to work after SAHM for 15 years, and a lot of sacrifices. tuition is just part of the equation, remember to add the social aspect of it, field trips, ski club, dance..(if u have a DD, this gets expensive, etc)..
Anonymous wrote:To those that send kids to private, why did you choose to do so? Is the education actually better (not fancier, but better)? How are your local public schools?
We wrestled with this and chose to buy in an excellent public district because we thought there would be less privilege and entitlement (not sure it actually worked out that way). Now we have a SN child so may end up in private anyway.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To those that send kids to private, why did you choose to do so? Is the education actually better (not fancier, but better)? How are your local public schools?
We wrestled with this and chose to buy in an excellent public district because we thought there would be less privilege and entitlement (not sure it actually worked out that way). Now we have a SN child so may end up in private anyway.
We chose private schools, despite living in a top public school district, because the smaller class size means the teachers really can - and do - focus on your child's needs (do they require additional in-class enrichment and work, or do they require the support of an in-school specialist). The private school we chose (or that chose us) also had an especially rigorous academic program in an area we especially valued; although they turned out to be academically strong across the Board. A small private school can also be a place where a naturally more reserved child can blossom socially, and find their confidence in a community that supports and knows them. It has worked out well for us, the oldest attends one of the nation' stop colleges, the other is ranked in the top of their high school class, and they all have an incredible breadth of knowledge, confidence, culture, and talent.
Same here but it is too soon to know how this translates into the future. I will be the first to say though there are kids that flourish in public school. I've seen that kid that was shy find a few close friends and get to a comfortable place socially. For lots of reasons, it never clicked for one of my kids at public school and when I was on the fence between public and private, someone had said something along the lines of why am I trying to fit a square peg in a round hole instead of finding a better fit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To those that send kids to private, why did you choose to do so? Is the education actually better (not fancier, but better)? How are your local public schools?
We wrestled with this and chose to buy in an excellent public district because we thought there would be less privilege and entitlement (not sure it actually worked out that way). Now we have a SN child so may end up in private anyway.
We chose private schools, despite living in a top public school district, because the smaller class size means the teachers really can - and do - focus on your child's needs (do they require additional in-class enrichment and work, or do they require the support of an in-school specialist). The private school we chose (or that chose us) also had an especially rigorous academic program in an area we especially valued; although they turned out to be academically strong across the Board. A small private school can also be a place where a naturally more reserved child can blossom socially, and find their confidence in a community that supports and knows them. It has worked out well for us, the oldest attends one of the nation' stop colleges, the other is ranked in the top of their high school class, and they all have an incredible breadth of knowledge, confidence, culture, and talent.
Anonymous wrote:We make 200K, have a very modest home, little saved for college, a decent amount saved for retirement, drive older cars and take modest vacations. We have two DC at schools that cost 30 K each. One kid gets 50 percent FA and the other gets 25 percent. We believe that every penny has been worth it. Kids have flourished and oldest just admitted to a great college EA with partial FA. Kids have flourished in small classes, amazing cultural opportunities, traveled with school, and generally been exposed to so many things we could not offer at home. Both kids have learned so much they already have a world outlook and great sense of self. I would sell the house and live in a small apartment to make private tuition if I had to.
Anonymous wrote:We have one in private and one in public. Longitudinal study.
Anonymous wrote:To those that send kids to private, why did you choose to do so? Is the education actually better (not fancier, but better)? How are your local public schools?
We wrestled with this and chose to buy in an excellent public district because we thought there would be less privilege and entitlement (not sure it actually worked out that way). Now we have a SN child so may end up in private anyway.