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Anyone have their kids in private school?

46,531 Views | 317 Replies | Last: 23 days ago by fletch01
ccolley68
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Captain Winky said:

Sounds like it would just be cheaper to move to a city that doesn't have terrible school districts


For us, it's not that the schools in our area aren't highly rated. We aren't in CoH, our local school district is very highly rated, the elementary my kids are zoned to is new and a great looking school that gets all the TEA accolades. It's more curriculum and the overall experience for school, as well as a Christian education. All aspects that have taken a backseat in the public school system in favor of standardized test teaching and results. And public school districts and individual schools are rated against each other, not against the private schools. A highly rated public school and district in many cases is just the tallest midget. Better than the competition, but the competition just sucks more.
BigOil
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My HS junior switched to Mirus Academy in Old Katy this past January, from Jordan HS KISD… so far so good.
CDUB98
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Quote:

It's more curriculum and the overall experience for school, as well as a Christian education. All aspects that have taken a backseat in the public school system in favor of standardized test teaching and results.
Cibalo
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I misspoke. There are a few other schools as well. I got my stats mixed up.

St Anne has a full time security officer and then there are a number of HPD officers on campus any time students are present.

It is unfortunate that it is needed but it is the world we live in.
czechy91
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Jerzzy said:

Since we have an HISD thread figured it makes sense to bring private school info to another feed.

We are a few years out from the kiddos being in kindergarten but trying to figure out a private school short list. We live in Independence Heights and the school here is a D rated school so its never been an option.

What's the general consensus on various private schools in houston (elementary primarily)?
Are you opposed to public school in general or are you set on private? As others have noted not all public schools are awful. We moved to Katy in the 90s in part for the school district and our kids ended up doing quite well. Both kids were involved in sports, took all PreAP and AP courses, ended up barely outside top 10 percent, scored well on SAT and ended up at A&M. What more could a dad ask for?

Obviously the schools aren't perfect but I found that by taking AP classes the kids are surrounded by more like minded students who are focused on getting an education and fighting for the 10%. The majority of these kids have pretty solid values and don't cause trouble.
cajunaggie08
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czechy91 said:

Jerzzy said:

Since we have an HISD thread figured it makes sense to bring private school info to another feed.

We are a few years out from the kiddos being in kindergarten but trying to figure out a private school short list. We live in Independence Heights and the school here is a D rated school so its never been an option.

What's the general consensus on various private schools in houston (elementary primarily)?
Are you opposed to public school in general or are you set on private? As others have noted not all public schools are awful. We moved to Katy in the 90s in part for the school district and our kids ended up doing quite well. Both kids were involved in sports, took all PreAP and AP courses, ended up barely outside top 10 percent, scored well on SAT and ended up at A&M. What more could a dad ask for?

Obviously the schools aren't perfect but I found that by taking AP classes the kids are surrounded by more like minded students who are focused on getting an education and fighting for the 10%. The majority of these kids have pretty solid values and don't cause trouble.
As a Katy ISD graduate that took Pre-AP and AP classes, I thought high school was harder than most of college. Granted I only went to a state school for college
bigjag19
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Same, but CCISD.
maroonpivo
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20k a year? BARF
aggiebrad94
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Have you looked into the public charter options?

I have a good buddy who works for https://responsiveed.com/ .
TarponChaser
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My kids are 100% going to public schools where they'll learn to prison shank your kids without being noticed and get away clean.
cs09
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Captain Winky said:

Sounds like it would just be cheaper to move to a city that doesn't have terrible school districts
True, but the only option for that would be the suburbs and I'm just personally not a suburban kind of guy, nor is my wife.

I think its to each their own - my sister and her family live in Pearland and they love it. And we love to go visit them, but its just not where we chose to put our roots down. In choosing where we live we always knew we would need to earmark funds for Catholic school, but since that's how my parents raised me and my siblings it was essentially second nature for us.
Ag13
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Anyone have any experience with John Paul II in Houston?
swimmerbabe11
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my hypothetical children will probably go to Memorial and then we'll eventually have to move farther north for concordia.

https://www.memoriallutheranschool.org/about/classical-education.cfm

Buck Turgidson
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For those who are just starting to consider private schools for their young kids, my first piece of advice is to visit all the schools on your list and really check them out in person. Published test scores and other stats only go so far. I started researching schools as soon as it was confirmed that my wife was pregnant. My initial list of schools that I picked based upon online research wound up being 100% different than the schools we really chose after visiting them.

A series of in-person visits is really the only way you will gain a comfort level for the specific people who are going to have a huge influence on your kids inside and outside the classroom. Besides teachers, you'll have coaches, fellow students and their families all playing a big role in your kids childhoods. We have been very fortunate to have our three in schools filled with like-minded families. That means their friends and the families of those friends are the kind of people you are glad to have your kids hanging around, doing sleepovers, playing on sports teams with and eventually dating (my kids are not quite old enough for that yet). These are the people who become the volunteer coaches on the sports teams, chaperone field trips or coach on cheerleading squads, etc.

You must also decide if you want a serious religious component or not. We quickly realized that some "Christian" schools don't really walk the walk. We wanted the real deal, with chapel, Bible classes, regular prayers and a Christian perspective infused into the curriculum. In our school's application process, you must submit letters of recommendation from you pastor indicating that your family regularly attends church services and is involved with church activities. Other Christian schools do not require that and take the stance that they will evangelize non-Christian students once they are in. Many other schools are just going through the motions or are purely secular (and usually woke).

Our kids are not enrolled in one of the 2-3 schools whose names everybody recognizes (St. Johns, Kinkaid, Strake), but they still receive a superior education compared to even those public schools that people tout as being near the top. We've had kids transfer in from well regarded, suburban public schools and struggle to catch-up academically in even the on-level courses.

Also, just because a school doesn't send every graduate to an Ivy League institution, doesn't mean that a self-motivated student wouldn't get into a highly competitive university. Our school sends a high percentage of each graduating class to A&M and Baylor, but we also send kids to MIT, Stanford, Rice, Tulane, service academies etc. each year. The point of all that is to say that published stats about previous graduating classes don't guarantee any particular result for your kid. You have to look deeper than those stats.
Buck Turgidson
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One thing I did to get a good feel for the people in the schools we were considering was to attend some of their football games. Are they booing, cursing or yelling ugly things at the refs? Are the people friendly to you as a visitor? How do the kids in the stands behave? Are the players exhibiting sportsmanship or taking cheap shots?

People can find it hard to maintain a false mask at sporting events. My boys were playing an elementary soccer game against a team from a school that has been mentioned earlier in this thread, and one of their players Dads went crazy and started screaming the F word at the poor volunteer referee. Everybody, including the grade school kids, heard and saw this outburst. To the credit of the other school, that parent was banned from future games.
El Gallo Blanco
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Crazy that daycare for toddler is pretty comparable to what people are paying for good private schools.
gindaloon
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Look at St John's and Kinkaid tuition then you will do more than barf.
CDUB98
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You could not pay me to send my kid to Kinkaid with all those rich ****sticks. Pretentious *******s.
El Gallo Blanco
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CDUB98 said:

You could not pay me to send my kid to Kinkaid with all those rich ****sticks. Pretentious *******s.
I would rather send to Spring Woods. Get them some culture, and coach them up at home as needed...extra bonus that they will place easier into college. Kinkaid grads pretty much all fit the same mold...soft and pretentious. Almost every single one. My fav is when they start talkin with "country" down at the ranch or on a hunting trip.
Serotonin
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Quote:

My fav is when they start talkin country down at the ranch or on a hunting trip.
lol, you just nailed that slice of Texas culture. Fortunately it is less prominent in Houston than Dallas.
El Gallo Blanco
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Serotonin said:

Quote:

My fav is when they start talkin country down at the ranch or on a hunting trip.
lol, you just nailed that slice of Texas culture. Fortunately it is less prominent in Houston than Dallas.
They'll crank it up for business calls too, when needed.
bularry
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Quote:

We've had kids transfer in from well regarded, suburban public schools and struggle to catch-up academically in even the on-level courses.
Let's call them out... what public schools?
ccolley68
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bularry said:

Quote:

We've had kids transfer in from well regarded, suburban public schools and struggle to catch-up academically in even the on-level courses.
Let's call them out... what public schools?


I'm not gonna call out any specific public schools because it's unnecessary. And OP was looking for opinions on private schools from those of us who have kids in private. Not intended to be a place for those who are public school grads and/or who have their kids in public to come and defend themselves or their decisions. I get it, I'm a public school grad myself, but as I've said all throughout, it's not the same as it was when we were kids.

That said, I do have a coworker who has twin sons. One goes to Strake, the other goes to the good and highly rated public school he is zoned to in one of the Houston suburbs. His son at Strake is far ahead of his other son. One is a self starter academic kid, and that's the one at Strake. The other is more of a jock and doesn't have the self discipline that a college prep like Strake requires. Not all schools that are private are going to be ahead of public education, and vice versa, but it is normally the case.

And if your kid thrives in an environment where they have a lot more of the onus for their schoolwork on themselves like it will be in college, then private prep may be the way for them. If your kid has collegiate sports aspirations or beyond, smaller private may not be the best choice. To each their own.
AgLiving06
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swimmerbabe11 said:

my hypothetical children will probably go to Memorial and then we'll eventually have to move farther north for concordia.

https://www.memoriallutheranschool.org/about/classical-education.cfm



I got excited that somebody else was aware of Memorial, but then I saw it was you haha.

We have both kids there and they are doing excellent.

One thing to mention is that a lot of private schools can be too focused on one thing or another, whether it be academics or sports, or something else. The first private school we had our kids at only had extra-curriculars for the older kids, and nothing really for the younger ones. We moved them to Memorial and there's always something going on to keep the kids engaged.
schmendeler
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Our kids go to public. We considered private but we didn't want any religious instruction, and also wanted our kids to be well-rounded, and not in a bubble of only the same kind of people as us.

We've had great teachers for our kids, and the scale of the school means lots of resources and opportunities that might not be available in a smaller school population.
CDUB98
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schmendeler said:

also wanted our kids to be well-rounded, and not in a bubble of only the same kind of people as us.


Tell me you don't know what you're talking about without telling me you don't know what you're talking about.
schmendeler
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Feel free to take offense from me sharing our personal reasons for choosing public school without knowing anything about me or my experiences with private schools.
BMX Bandit
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his laughing at your ignorance and false assumptions is not "taking offense."
Seersucker Ag 2011
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schmendeler said:

Our kids go to public. We considered private but we didn't want any religious instruction


Every school in America has "religious" instruction.
schmendeler
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It's an open invitation
Ray Guy
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Nice attitude. You don't know ***** Respectfully.
schmendeler
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Seersucker Ag 2011 said:

schmendeler said:

Our kids go to public. We considered private but we didn't want any religious instruction


Every school in America has "religious" instruction.


I know what you are insinuating. But your assertion is true on its face as well. Religious people seemingly can't help sharing about their beliefs. Whether it's other kids talking about God and Jesus and hell and the devil, or school librarians sharing the biblical Christmas story to the kids at Christmas time, or a local church covertly sponsoring "family nights" at the school, you can't get away from it completely, even in a nominally secular setting. You take it as it comes. It's not worth getting upset about.
Ray Guy
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Wrong, day care is less. Enjoy it while it lasts. Then it's either move away (50 miles+) pay more at private, or send to HISD prison camps.
Seersucker Ag 2011
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schmendeler said:

Seersucker Ag 2011 said:

schmendeler said:

Our kids go to public. We considered private but we didn't want any religious instruction


Every school in America has "religious" instruction.


I know what you are insinuating. But your assertion is true on its face as well. Religious people seemingly can't help sharing about their beliefs. Whether it's other kids talking about God and Jesus and hell and the devil, or school librarians sharing the biblical Christmas story to the kids at Christmas time, or a local church covertly sponsoring "family nights" at the school, you can't get away from it completely, even in a nominally secular setting. You take it as it comes. It's not worth getting upset about.


No, I'm just talking about public schools pushing a political agenda
Ray Guy
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You're not completely right on this rebuttal.
 
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