Well, then, for that matter there are destructive cliques everywhere. That's my point. You can't selectively avoid them.
3/24/2007 12:18:46 PM
I went to Catholic school from 1-8 grade, and then public high school. My public high school seemed a lot less "cliquey" than the private school, although that could simply be a function of middle vs. high school. There were a fair number of fuck-ups at the Catholic school, and I would say that on a whole, my graduating class there didn't turn out that great -- at least based on the people I've heard about in the last couple of years (teenage mothers, strippers, cokeheads, alcoholics). And from an academic standpoint, a fair number of them are in community college at best.By contrast, high school was pretty good, I interacted with a much wider range of people. My school, though, was unusual in that it has a special "school-within-a-school" interdisciplinary program where you can take a bunch of AP classes. Because of that, I came into State with about 20 credit hours. Because that program was unique to our school, the county allowed us to have open enrollment -- kids came to the school specifically for academic reasons. To be cynical, it basically let the county get more white kids into our inner-city school without drawing funky districts. Most of the kids in this program were pretty well-rounded -- many of us were honor roll students who also played sports.Also,
3/24/2007 12:34:26 PM
i went to a public school, but i also had a ton of friends who went to some of the area's private schools. they had just as many cliques as my school did. there wasn't any rivalry or dislike between the cliques at my school though. everyone got along with each other for the most part. i had good friends who were in jrotc, the goth kids, the preppy ones, the athletes, the skaters, the hippies, the blacks, the hispanics, the asians, geeks, etc. no one really gave a fuck. being that like 75% of us were military kids, i think we all grew up exposed to alot of diverse cultures. and alot of kids participated in a wide range of extracurricular activites, and i think that played a big part in everyone getting along.[Edited on March 24, 2007 at 12:49 PM. Reason : ]
3/24/2007 12:47:01 PM
I'm gonna give my two cents:It seems like you've basically made up your minds to send them to private school atleast through grade school, with the real question being should you continue to do so in high school. There are going to be cliques at any high school, what your don't want is for them to "get in the way" so-to-speak. Really, I think the only way to do that is to have a student body that is relatively homogeneous, so that the disparity between different groups is smaller. In the end, it all comes down to your particular set of options. If your choices are Athens Drive or Cary Academy, you pick Cary Academy. But, if the choice is between Enloe and Cardinal Gibbons, maybe you should save your money. It should also depend (to an extent) on what your kid wants. There's also a big difference between "elite" private schools and the everyday variety. If you can get your kid into somewhere like Deerfield, Choate Rosemary, or Georgetown Prep, and it's practical for them to go then I think it's crazy for them not to.
3/24/2007 12:48:51 PM
My HS was a very good HS in Charlotte and we had tons of AP classes, early work release credit not to mention local colleges that worked with the school to get us early college credits that also applied towards graduation. So it does very much depend on which HS you goto. We also had many different languages offered so you weren't just stuck with Spanish, French or Latin. My HS was also located in mainly white area of south Charlotte however they did bus the two rival neighborhoods from downtown Charlotte to our school as well. The school was still mainly white and we had a Marine for a Principal until he left for a school district job. We had very little problems such as fighting or such until he left but we still had WAY less than anyother public school in Charlotte. I am sure people familiar with Charlotte know now where I went to HS...LOL
3/24/2007 1:03:45 PM
i appreciate everyones comments. really, its all very helpful and interesting to hear various experiences.
3/24/2007 1:05:14 PM
3/24/2007 1:17:24 PM
My high school had really defined cliques, mostly due to the disparities in income and location.We had about 1/3 of our students coming from the richest neighborhood in town, 1/3 from one of the poorest areas, and the other third from various middle-class areas.I think really it's ALL about you as parents. If you are good parents and instill good values and morals into your kids, I feel like a GOOD public school is the best way to go. The POTENTIAL of public school is higher than private, but private schools offer the best baseline education.So basically, just see how your kid grows up and make decisions for him/her as they need to be made. Keep an open mind. Maybe they'll end up wanting to do theatre, or be a mechanic, who knows. I think it's silly and pretty useless to try and make a decision like this now.
3/24/2007 1:27:14 PM
So which is better, private or public, being a blue devil or being part of the wolfpack?
3/24/2007 1:43:11 PM
i absolutely LOVE NC State, and i think its a great school. espeically engineering, A+ would definitely reccommend....but if i had the 20K/year tuition, i'da seriously thought about going to duke. since i didnt have the money, and wasnt cool enough for a scholarship, I'll fall back to default and say Fuck Duke. no way i'da ever gone to Carolina tho.
3/24/2007 1:47:25 PM
3/24/2007 2:53:20 PM
3/24/2007 3:45:19 PM
3/24/2007 4:00:49 PM
^ yeah. "weird", maybe, but i'd like to see an analysis of NCSSM vs public vs private school students and see what happens to them after high school. College entrants, advanced degrees, and average salaries are surely significantly higher than other students. And they may seem weird to you from the outside, but most of them really enjoy being like that and enjoy each other's company, so surely there is nothing wrong with that.
3/24/2007 4:05:45 PM
3/24/2007 4:49:13 PM
I went to public school until my junior year of HS, then transferred to a private school. Both had cliques. I mean, if you really want to get into, even now as a young professional, I am involved in cliques. Cliques are just circles of friends with whom you have a bond/ something in common. Who really cares once you are out of HS?As far as academics, I found that the academics at my public school HS was much more rigorous than the private HS. My public school divided classes into basic, college prep, and honors. The public school I went to was small, so everyone took all the classes. The difficulty of classes was leveled so that everyone would understand. There were also no number grades or class rankings, so in general, we were less competitive about doing well in school.Conclusion: I am glad I experienced both public and private school. If I had to do it over again, I would do it the same way. The next best way to do it is all public school. Between the social and academic aspect, I got everything I needed in public schools.
3/24/2007 5:18:11 PM
3/24/2007 5:51:09 PM
3/24/2007 7:01:59 PM
^^ yeah, good point. It wouldn't be fair to compare the NCSSM students with a general HS population. I guess you could find people like me and at least 10 others that I know of from my high school who were accepted to NCSSM but declined to go, or you would have to go to other states and find students with similar grades and SAT scores (if you can find other states where students take the SAT in 10th grade....)either way, weird or not, i'm sure they're doing just fine for themselves. One NCSSM student I knew from my HS (a year older than me) took the opportunity to gain so much extra college credit that he graduated from NCSU with 3 full degrees in completely separate topics (like CSC, French and Psychology or something) in 3 years and works at Google now.[Edited on March 24, 2007 at 7:04 PM. Reason : .]^ right, my friend at google was accepted to MIT but decided on NCSU most because of cost. [Edited on March 24, 2007 at 7:06 PM. Reason : .]
3/24/2007 7:04:01 PM
depends on the size of the school
3/24/2007 7:43:08 PM
I went to private school from pre-K through 12th grade (at a school with about 45 in a class). To answer your original question about "it's cool to be stupid" ... at my school we only had an AP/honors and a college prep track. 100% of grads were accepted to college, so even those who were less academically inclined went to college. However, yes, there were kids who would slack off and had a poor attitude about academics (my sister was one of them in her class!)The big things to consider would be to compare the schools you're interested in and the local public schools, like was said earlier. (I grew up in rural SC, and public schools weren't an option).Start looking now and get on any lists possible. (The school I went to has a waiting list for pre-K programs, and as soon as a child is born, some families are getting on admissions list. It's MUCH harder to get into as a child gets older - it's based on testing scores, an applications, interviews, etc. And they accepted no transfers in senior year - even though that's far off for your kids! But every school is different.)We had cliques, but a lot of these were based on social status and parents' occupations -- basically parents who were of a certain profession socialized together, put their kids in 2-year-old day school together, dance classes together, etc. The kids knew each other from early on and went to school together with a social circle set up and it was VERY hard for new kids to come into the mix. (With 45 kids, about 20 girls, if 5 or 6 are close, they become the ringleaders. Guys had it easier because if a guy was good at sports and attractive, he could come in, get with a ringleader girl, and he would be popular. With so few people, if anyone new came in, the opposite sex was interested. But a new pretty girl would be snubbed and rejected by the other girls, while a new attractive guy would be embraced by the guys -- especially if he was from public school and knew people to get drugs/alcohol from.)
3/24/2007 9:24:28 PM
I went to Enloe as well. I loved everything about it to tell you the truth. The diversity helped me deal with all types of people...I feel like private schools are more like "its cool to have my parents pay for my way into college w/o earning it".[Edited on March 24, 2007 at 9:26 PM. Reason : www]
3/24/2007 9:24:41 PM
How your kid turns out is more up to you than the school.In my opinion 1/2 my school was borderline retarded %20 were into real drugs and %30 were smart and going somewhere in life (public school) i know those happen to add up to 100% but there are retarded druggies and as well as smart ones etc.Now my friend's private school didn't have nearly as many kids that are complete idiots as my public school did but... i'd say %60 or more of those kids were into drugs.and then there are private schools like Charlotte Catholic.... which basically is doing the best it can to be like the fucked up school in "cruel intentions"
3/24/2007 10:03:49 PM
3/24/2007 10:16:51 PM
3/24/2007 10:24:38 PM
And your wife sounds like a total nerd, by the way.
3/24/2007 10:28:32 PM
^you know you could have just hit the "edit post" button!
3/24/2007 10:56:50 PM
went to private catholic school in charlotteEvery school has their own kinds of cliques. More so the public school system, but a little less in private schools. As far as which clique your child joins, its all up to you as parents. Need to discipline and teach your child the principles you want them to have for the rest of their lives. I knew a ton of kids with wealthy parents who did drugs and did sub par in academics, but I also knew a ton of kids with wealthy parents who did drugs and had stellar grades. And that goes the same for kids who didnt do drugs. Public or Private, it depends on the parent as to how the kid will grow up to be. Although I do favor private because of better academics and a lesser clique'ish system.
3/24/2007 11:05:55 PM
If you have the money....private school is the way to go. I was in public school K-12....but I will be an anomaly at my high school reunion....Nobody went to college.
3/25/2007 2:05:24 AM
3/25/2007 2:13:45 AM
send your kid to private school if you want them to be drug addicts.rich, bored suburban kids = drug users. trust me, it happens. private school kids are just better liars.
3/25/2007 3:13:53 AM
Yeah private school kids are smart but not any smarter than the top group of public school kids who could have went to private school. But, some of the dirtiest girls i've ever met went to private school.and every guy i know that went to private school has at least tried coke.
3/25/2007 8:45:28 AM
go to magnet schools- wiley, martin and enloe are all great public schools.
3/25/2007 9:47:51 AM
That's a good idea, too.Over where I teach we have Reid Ross and Massey Hill Classical. Basically legal segregation, but given the condition of the traditional schools in the area, I'd send my kids there. Screw principles. Here's Massey Hill:http://www.greatschools.net/cgi-bin/nc/other/29Here's the nearest traditional school:http://www.greatschools.net/cgi-bin/nc/other/67Take a look at the demographics, then tell me you wouldn't laugh when the Superintendent can't seem to figure out what's wrong with that school.
3/25/2007 11:21:21 AM
i went to both public and private schools. public in elementary, private middle and first year of high school, then back to public.private schools may have better teachers, but no cliques? no way. private school was just as cliquey as public school, but you get to add dollar signs to the cliques.but being in public school gave me more options academically that the private school didn't offer with it being so small. plus, my high school (public) had a distance education learning center where many classes were taught from NCSSM and other magnet schools in NC. private school didn't offer that.[Edited on March 25, 2007 at 11:31 AM. Reason : ]
3/25/2007 11:25:53 AM
3/25/2007 12:57:31 PM
i dunno. i knew kids who went to ncssm and ones who could have gone and didn't for various reasons. they've all turned out pretty well.
3/25/2007 1:31:54 PM
^^ agreedi would have loved to go there and was smart enough to make it in... but...neither my parents or i knew anything about it.[Edited on March 25, 2007 at 1:34 PM. Reason : .]
3/25/2007 1:33:49 PM
3/25/2007 1:54:51 PM
hahahI was just looking up the top-100 high schools in the nation; Enloe is #52.OMG GHETTO
3/25/2007 2:37:22 PM
I'm an Enloe alum (almost 15 years ago). Because everyone (in the honors program) was a good student, I looked very average by comparison to my classmates. However, the teachers were outstanding, and I really enjoyed it. After surviving (even with a lot of B's and C's) in a rigorous program there, college was easy by comparison.In terms of development of a young person, I think that middle school is the most critical in terms of influence. Private school may well be worth the money at that level, but the diversity of people, classes, and activities at a public high school make it a good choice, provided that it's a decent public school.
3/25/2007 3:05:28 PM
3/25/2007 8:47:12 PM
3/26/2007 2:36:11 AM
3/26/2007 6:11:48 AM
3/26/2007 8:09:36 AM
Ok we must have different opinions of what "overprotective" is because not letting your child try a peach is alot different than from not allowing my 15-16 year old kid goto a school that is miles away from home at such a young age! Just because I child wants to leave home isn't necessarily a good indicator...kids runaway from home all the time! And I realize that there is an application process to all of this all I have said is that I don't agree with this and wouldn't do it with my kids. I know you aren't just sent there then it would be more like a jail and not a learning institution. I also agree that the experience itself not just the classes is what makes NCSSM different. This thread isn't really about NCSSM to begin with. It is about the cliques found in public and private schools and having gone to both I shared my experiences and since his wife had used NCSSM in her debate I just stated MY OPINION on NCSSM in the fact that I wouldn't send my children there. I didn't crap on anyone's experience or anything else because there are kids that can thrive in this situation and I didn't say any different. My ex was one of them and went on to get a ChemE degree from NCSU with a minor in Computer Sci. He isn't using his ChemE degree at all but he is using his Comp. Sci. minor. I never said the NCSSM wasn't right for everyone or anyone I just said that I don't think I could ever do it with my kids.
3/26/2007 10:41:55 AM
3/26/2007 11:10:18 AM
I will do everything to further my child's education I just think there are other solutions than NCSSM. To me not letting you child try new things and deprive them of key life experiences is overprotective. Not letting them goto some school miles away from home when you can find what they want elsewhere is not.
3/26/2007 11:17:52 AM
it sounds like OP never went to school and just got his view of schools through too many 80's movies
3/26/2007 1:42:53 PM
3/26/2007 3:58:31 PM