Thats because you know it is accurate. Imagine paying for private school for any number of years and having to send your kid to Auburn or for that matter Georgia. Where’s the bang for the buck? Your aspirations should be UNC, Emory, UVA, or even better-Ivy, but the vast majority of private school kids go to a run of the mill public University, or small private. Here is the thing, why send your kid to private grade school or high school only to send your kid to public university (I was in private religious school thru 7th grade)? Private schools were created as a “class” separation, for special needs, or religious reasons. I’m not saying its wrong, but its not the meal ticket to success.
I know its accurate? You do you man. Have at it.
How do you know my kids arent aspiring to go to an Ivy League school (MIT actually)? Maybe that is our bang.
At MIT, almost 40% of their student base comes from private schools, yet only 10% of all high school students go to private school. Advantage? Of course there is and only a fool would even try to disagree. Its a better education in most situations for reasons you damn well know. Less distractions, overall better teachers, smaller classes, and more specific classes pointed towards programs like RSI. Private schools provide a more specialized and focused curriculum with smaller class sizes rather than focusing on state level testing so they can keep their funding.
And of course you are looking at it all wrong. "
the vast majority of private school kids go to a run of the mill public University". Source? There isnt one. The facts are simple. Most Ivy League schools have roughly a 3-2 average of public vs private school kids, yet, once again only 9-10% of the total high schoolers go to private schools. Its pretty simple math. And below is one of many sources....see below.
The Ivy League might be a bastion of private higher education, but does this mean that their undergraduate student bodies are typically admitted from private high schools? The data reveals a pan-Ivy breakdown of students admitted from public versus private high schools at a ratio of roughly 3 to 2. This may seem fairly democratic, but it is worth keeping in mind that 91% of students across America are enrolled in public schools, and only 9% are enrolled in private schools, according to Department of Education data. In other words, private school students are still overrepresented across the Ivy League. - Ivy Coach
And finally, your comment
"Imagine paying for private school for any number of years and having to send your kid to Auburn or for that matter Georgia." I dont care if my second son, who wants to go to LSU or UGA, chooses a state school. He is going to go there and excel. Not saying a public school kid wont, but I like the odds. I also like him going to this school and being exposed to the environment that demands excellence. Once again, not exclusive to private school kids, but I saw who he was in class with the half year he was at public school here in Galveston. And to be clear, I said in another post, the public school in Mandeville was fantastic.
So in conclusion, your sweeping comments are way off. Ask anyone here that lives in New Orleans if public school is even close to an option. Do it. Ask.