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QuinSnydersHair

Well-Known Member
My kids are eight and six, and as I see what their schools are like and will be, I start to grow concerned that public education may not be an option. Does anyone send their kids to private schools? Catholic schools? How much do they cost?

I'm in the Arlington, VA area so obviously costs will be different, maybe much different. But I'm still starting to think that paying an arm and a leg may be worth it.

Also, once you start sending your kids to private/Catholic (is there even a difference?) schools, is it tough to pull them out and put them back in public if you feel the cost isn't worth it?

Any help would really help here. You won't see it in the news but one fifth grader brought in a knife this year and one a bb gun. Not cool. We're looked at as a good district too.
 
After watching Waiting for Superman, I'm willing to pay whatever I need to get my daughter into a decent school
 
Didn't read any of that ****^

Had a dream two nights ago that I hadn't finished college yet and I had to go back.

Worst freaking dream ever.
 
My kids are eight and six, and as I see what their schools are like and will be, I start to grow concerned that public education may not be an option. Does anyone send their kids to private schools? Catholic schools? How much do they cost?

I'm in the Arlington, VA area so obviously costs will be different, maybe much different. But I'm still starting to think that paying an arm and a leg may be worth it.

Also, once you start sending your kids to private/Catholic (is there even a difference?) schools, is it tough to pull them out and put them back in public if you feel the cost isn't worth it?

Any help would really help here. You won't see it in the news but one fifth grader brought in a knife this year and one a bb gun. Not cool. We're looked at as a good district too.

Every school has it's problem students, even the private and Catholic schools. As long as your school is accredited, it's not an issue for students to go back and forth between them (my siblings and I did just that).

The best option it to choose a wealthy suburb, probably.
 
Every school has it's problem students, even the private and Catholic schools. As long as your school is accredited, it's not an issue for students to go back and forth between them (my siblings and I did just that).

The best option it to choose a wealthy suburb, probably.

We live in a very wealthy suburb. That's just my problem. What are the pros and cons of public vs. private/Catholic?
 
I had my kids in private school for 3 years. They tested two grades ahead in every subject. I put them in public for the sports teams and after. One year they now test at theyre grade level.
 
My oldest son (12), who has PDD-NOS - what amounts to a light shade of autism - was struggling his last year in public elementary, so we switched him to a charter school for Jr High.

It's made all the difference in the world and doesn't cost us an arm and a leg. He is excelling and it isn't even an autism specialty school.
 
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