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Catholic School vs Private vs Charter vs Public
Posted on 10/13/15 at 6:36 pm
Posted on 10/13/15 at 6:36 pm
Which would you send your child to and why? My oldest is entering Pre-K next year and weighing the options. I went to Catholic school from Pre-K until college. I'm not sure the extra expense is worth the educational difference. I believe I'll be extremely involved in their education and thus potentially charter or public school is the better investment. This is in the Belton/Temple TX area for those interested.
Posted on 10/13/15 at 6:37 pm to OleWarSkuleAlum
Oh look...this thread again
Posted on 10/13/15 at 6:38 pm to OleWarSkuleAlum
Just depends on how good the schools are in your area and what you want out of said school.
Do your research. Some private and catholic schools are average and some are outstanding
Do your research. Some private and catholic schools are average and some are outstanding
Posted on 10/13/15 at 6:38 pm to OleWarSkuleAlum
I'm not all that familiar with Texas, but aren't they known for good public schools?
Posted on 10/13/15 at 6:55 pm to OleWarSkuleAlum
Catholic schools run south LA.
Posted on 10/13/15 at 6:56 pm to OleWarSkuleAlum
I had two graduate from Catholic schools, and my youngest is currently a sophomore. Very happy with the choices we made.
Posted on 10/13/15 at 6:59 pm to OleWarSkuleAlum
Public if you want your child to learn how to deal with adversity
Posted on 10/13/15 at 7:04 pm to Futures Bleak
Such a dumb thing to say
Posted on 10/13/15 at 7:07 pm to Futures Bleak
i took a class on "how to deal with adversarial people".
Posted on 10/13/15 at 7:18 pm to notiger1997
Go to a public school in NOLA and get back to me
Posted on 10/13/15 at 7:25 pm to OleWarSkuleAlum
How is public school or a charter school an investment?
There is no universal answer to your question as it depends completely on where you are.
There is no universal answer to your question as it depends completely on where you are.
Posted on 10/13/15 at 7:30 pm to CajunAlum Tiger Fan
Charter -- only good for rural small towns that want to avoid the image of "segregated" and "not giving blacks a chance". If I am middle-class or above, there's just no way I send my child to one. Also, don't they have similar rules like Section 8 Housing? I don't know the whole process like I did when they became a splash some ten years ago. They also need to be well-funded and have enough students to serve as a Charter with options of a public and a nearby private (Delhi for instance) school. Mississippi has many that thrive, but look who I'm talking about here. I would not send my child to one, but it all depends on where I am living.
Mississippi needs them because they're about 70 percent rural and every small town -- the tons that the state has -- has/had a public and a private school. When segregation became law, towns like Canton and Clarksdale converted any building they could (tent factory in Canton, i.e.) into a private school. If one was black and lower-class, it only made sense to go to a public school. Now, Charters give them a 2nd option if the child can get in. Still, 99/100 white families in MS who live at or slightly above means will continue with private education and oddly enough, the poor/lower class whites who attend public school will stay put. That state will always have those issues. Charter schools in MS are just as minority-filled as public.
Pretty much.
Mississippi needs them because they're about 70 percent rural and every small town -- the tons that the state has -- has/had a public and a private school. When segregation became law, towns like Canton and Clarksdale converted any building they could (tent factory in Canton, i.e.) into a private school. If one was black and lower-class, it only made sense to go to a public school. Now, Charters give them a 2nd option if the child can get in. Still, 99/100 white families in MS who live at or slightly above means will continue with private education and oddly enough, the poor/lower class whites who attend public school will stay put. That state will always have those issues. Charter schools in MS are just as minority-filled as public.
quote:
There is no universal answer to your question as it depends completely on where you are
Pretty much.
This post was edited on 10/13/15 at 7:38 pm
Posted on 10/13/15 at 7:51 pm to OleWarSkuleAlum
Around New Orleans, private schools have a better learning environment than most public schools. The advanced study public schools are pretty much the best around here, then private, then regular public.
Posted on 10/13/15 at 7:52 pm to OleWarSkuleAlum
quote:
This is in the Belton/Temple TX area for those interested.
Commute to Jesuit in NOLA.
Posted on 10/13/15 at 7:55 pm to iwasthere
quote:
The advanced study public schools are pretty much the best around here,
Besides Ben Franklin, which ones?
Posted on 10/13/15 at 7:56 pm to OleWarSkuleAlum
frick schools it starts with parents
Posted on 10/13/15 at 7:58 pm to Jake88
Marrero academy, gretna #2 are great elementary schools, Patrick f Taylor science academy, Ben Franklin, and Thomas Jefferson are all top notch high schools.
This post was edited on 10/13/15 at 7:59 pm
Posted on 10/13/15 at 7:59 pm to Jake88
quote:
Besides Ben Franklin, which ones?
Are you serious?
Franklin, Lusher and Haynes are the best 3 schools in the state.
This post was edited on 10/13/15 at 8:01 pm
Posted on 10/13/15 at 8:04 pm to Peekaboo
Well, the Jefferson Parish ones are right with them.
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