GoFuckYourself.com - Adult Webmaster Forum

GoFuckYourself.com - Adult Webmaster Forum (https://gfy.com/index.php)
-   Fucking Around & Business Discussion (https://gfy.com/forumdisplay.php?f=26)
-   -   Did the math last night - and I figured out that it's going to cost me over 400K ... (https://gfy.com/showthread.php?t=698797)

BusterBunny 01-24-2007 04:13 AM

50 million dollar tuition:Oh crap

CaptainWolfy 01-24-2007 04:22 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sly (Post 11780145)
I'm all for private school, but $20k a year per kid, dizZAMN brotha'. Those kids better cure cancer, AIDS, or ED so Juicy can finally get some poon without popping a C.

:1orglaugh :1orglaugh :1orglaugh

J$tyle$ 01-24-2007 01:57 PM

Posted by KK elsewhere ... great points!!!

Quote:

Originally Posted by *KK* (Post 1038485)
Public school is not the same any more. I went to public school, and I always thought that would be the way to go with my kid. Problem is, you've now got nearly 40 kids shoved into a classroom designed to hold 20. You've got one teacher -- especially when they get out of the really beginner grades -- trying to teach nearly 40 kids.

Then you've got to manage the walking pharmacopia of all the different meds, issues, and crap going on with all these kids.

One of my good friends is a teacher and he's getting out of it as fast as he can. After they convicted the teacher for "showing her students porn" when she had complained repeatedly that there was something wrong with the computer in her classroom (they wouldnt let her turn the computer off or unplug the network cable, against the rules) and no one would fix it, he's just done.

No one wants to teach any more in public school that is qualified to teach. The system really is broken.

Quote:

Originally Posted by *KK* (Post 1038505)
Do you have kids? Have you been inside the average public school classroom lately? Do you know any teachers?

Getting your children a good education is not pampering them. It's creating responsible and educated adults, something that is not happening in this country right now in public schools. The lack of funding, overcrowding in schools, and dearth of qualified teachers who truly want to be there makes for a very different education system than we had even ten years ago.


Josef Schwartz 01-24-2007 02:06 PM

Most expensive private school in here cost abour $4/year, and education in public schools is still good

ADL Colin 01-24-2007 02:22 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by TheJimmy (Post 11780776)
Harvard is about 20kish a year from what I heard recently, I don't think Notre Dame is up there yet...those are the only 2 good HS's that I know the rough pricing of offhand.

As for the grade school, are they really stacking up the same paper that the HS's are these days? ouch!

I think Harvard is over $40,000/year now with room and board .. or very close.

Harvard is giving free tuition to families making under $60,000/year though

Nicky 01-24-2007 02:37 PM

Private school or public school everyone is fucked up, this is gfy, remember!? :)

stev0 01-24-2007 03:00 PM

That's pretty insane... hopefully it's worth it though.

I guess it depends a lot on your area, public and private schools here are pretty much the same except for the uniforms. I know a lot of people that went to private schools and they're no better adjusted or educated than the rest of us. Just burned a bigger hole in their parents pockets.

I imagine the US is a lot different because of the rift between upper and lower income families that causes the poor kids to get lower quality medical care and a lower quality education, which is sad.

Z 01-24-2007 03:23 PM

Dude...private schools are completely worth it as long as they're not religious schools. Public schools in Florida are nothing but gladiator academies. After my 15th or 20th suspension and then 1st expulsion, my parents thought it was a good idea to put me in a Seventh Day Adventist private school. HA! That was like throwing a piranha in the goldfish tank and it did nothing but get worse the harder they tried to "save" me.

If you can raise your kids in a private school environment and give them that outlook on the world, good for you and them...do it.

J$tyle$ 01-24-2007 06:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Z (Post 11784672)
Dude...private schools are completely worth it as long as they're not religious schools. Public schools in Florida are nothing but gladiator academies. After my 15th or 20th suspension and then 1st expulsion, my parents thought it was a good idea to put me in a Seventh Day Adventist private school. HA! That was like throwing a piranha in the goldfish tank and it did nothing but get worse the harder they tried to "save" me.

If you can raise your kids in a private school environment and give them that outlook on the world, good for you and them...do it.

Not relegious and no uniforms.

LOL about your description of you at the Seventh Day Adventist private school :1orglaugh :1orglaugh

BlackCrayon 01-24-2007 06:19 PM

just think about this

did you need fancy private schools to become a success yourself?

will giving them everything they could want make them a successful person?

would you have had the same level of success if you didn't have to strugle?

J$tyle$ 01-24-2007 06:28 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BlackCrayon (Post 11785699)
just think about this

did you need fancy private schools to become a success yourself?

will giving them everything they could want make them a successful person?

would you have had the same level of success if you didn't have to strugle?

My kids are not spoiled. They don't get everything they could want. This is not a "fancy private school".

My kids don't watch TV, play computer games or wear designer clothes. They are not babysat by barney, square bob and dora the explorer.

Yes, i'm somewhat successful but I don't want my kids to go through all the experiences I have. I want them to have different motivation.

I became successful IN SPITE OF my up bringing.

I don't want my son to see his best friend shot in the head - and to have that experience change HIS life so he can become a "productive citizen" as opposed to a hoodlum.

:2 cents:

Just trying to find that middle ground :winkwink:

Phil21 01-24-2007 08:05 PM

Kudos.

Private school is still something I'm strongly considering for my son. I was home schooled until the 5th grade, when I went into private school. I went to one year of high school in private school, then went to a public high school in a (very) rich suburb. After that, I went to high school in an innner city school for a year, then dropped out. :) While I thought it sucked at the time, I wouldn't trade the experience of being in all those environments for the world. My best times in life were 7th and 8th grade in the private school, simply because it was a structured environment that allowed you to excel in what you were good at, while not babysitting you so much. Definitely good times to look back on, and has a large part to do with the natural interest in learning I picked up (had it before that, but they didn't squash it like some public school environments do).

I didn't go to the "rich" private schools - yes, obviously some folks were pretty well off, but in general there was less income there than in the rich suburbs public school.

In general?

1. Private school was more or less on par with the "advanced" classes in the suburban public school. Advanced classes in the private school were just a bit harder, but truly it was damned near on par educational wise. Social wise, the environments were quite a bit different though. I would say all in all the public school would set you up for life better socially if you have strong parental influence and involvement, but you could easily fall into some "bad crowds" and habits if not. The private school wasn't terrible socially, and a bit more safeguarded.

2. The inner city public schools were a joke. Period. 11th grade 'advanced' classes there were on par with crap we were learning in 7th and 8th grade private school. No one was there to learn, teachers couldn't do shit, etc. Just in general a terrible environment. I feel REAL bad for inner city school teachers in general - I saw some trying their hearts out, but simply were not given any tools to succeed. The few kids there actually wanting to learn quickly learn not to, as it will simply end up in constant ridicule. My son will NEVER be going to schools like that, it truly sickened me and let to me dropping out to simply take the GED test as I absolutely believe I was getting stupider every minute I stayed in that environment.

That said, the GED test is an absolute joke as well. I could have trivially passed it in 8th grade, without even breaking a sweat. I'm also not "smart", anyone in my class could have aced it as well.

given my experiences... I feel that the quality of education is far more dependent on the level and numbers of parents involved in the school, than if the school is actually private or public. If the majority of kids going to the school are motivated at home to learn and do well, then the teachers will actually be able to step up and do their jobs. Truly there are some amazing educators in this country, but most have been simply relegated to glorified babysitters.

Private school in my mind more or less removes the roll of the dice for how good a school is. It definitely is appealing as a parent, I can tell you that.

-Phil

Pipecrew 01-24-2007 08:14 PM

Damn, do you go around posting all the same stuff on all the boards, and then copying and posting your same replies? I noticed this in the KB thread too, it was like a blast from the past.

J$tyle$ 01-24-2007 08:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Pipecrew (Post 11786235)
Damn, do you go around posting all the same stuff on all the boards, and then copying and posting your same replies? I noticed this in the KB thread too, it was like a blast from the past.

Damn, do you call the networks when you see them running the same commercials or when TV shows in syndication on 4 different channels?

I post on 2 boards regularly.

Some threads I post on both boards.

Some answers too when they are relevent.

Some shit is for fun, some to vent, some for biz.

Is this really such a problem for you that it was necessary to point out - or ya just bored??? :winkwink:

J$tyle$ 01-24-2007 08:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Phil21 (Post 11786188)
Kudos.

Private school is still something I'm strongly considering for my son. I was home schooled until the 5th grade, when I went into private school. I went to one year of high school in private school, then went to a public high school in a (very) rich suburb. After that, I went to high school in an innner city school for a year, then dropped out. :) While I thought it sucked at the time, I wouldn't trade the experience of being in all those environments for the world. My best times in life were 7th and 8th grade in the private school, simply because it was a structured environment that allowed you to excel in what you were good at, while not babysitting you so much. Definitely good times to look back on, and has a large part to do with the natural interest in learning I picked up (had it before that, but they didn't squash it like some public school environments do).

I didn't go to the "rich" private schools - yes, obviously some folks were pretty well off, but in general there was less income there than in the rich suburbs public school.

In general?

1. Private school was more or less on par with the "advanced" classes in the suburban public school. Advanced classes in the private school were just a bit harder, but truly it was damned near on par educational wise. Social wise, the environments were quite a bit different though. I would say all in all the public school would set you up for life better socially if you have strong parental influence and involvement, but you could easily fall into some "bad crowds" and habits if not. The private school wasn't terrible socially, and a bit more safeguarded.

2. The inner city public schools were a joke. Period. 11th grade 'advanced' classes there were on par with crap we were learning in 7th and 8th grade private school. No one was there to learn, teachers couldn't do shit, etc. Just in general a terrible environment. I feel REAL bad for inner city school teachers in general - I saw some trying their hearts out, but simply were not given any tools to succeed. The few kids there actually wanting to learn quickly learn not to, as it will simply end up in constant ridicule. My son will NEVER be going to schools like that, it truly sickened me and let to me dropping out to simply take the GED test as I absolutely believe I was getting stupider every minute I stayed in that environment.

That said, the GED test is an absolute joke as well. I could have trivially passed it in 8th grade, without even breaking a sweat. I'm also not "smart", anyone in my class could have aced it as well.

given my experiences... I feel that the quality of education is far more dependent on the level and numbers of parents involved in the school, than if the school is actually private or public. If the majority of kids going to the school are motivated at home to learn and do well, then the teachers will actually be able to step up and do their jobs. Truly there are some amazing educators in this country, but most have been simply relegated to glorified babysitters.

Private school in my mind more or less removes the roll of the dice for how good a school is. It definitely is appealing as a parent, I can tell you that.

-Phil

Good post, man - I ended up getting my GED as well

:winkwink:

Peaches 01-24-2007 10:55 PM

It really all depends on where you live. I moved to a good public school district when my son was in middle school. His public HS was named one of the top 5 schools in the US when he was there and many pro ball players and CEOs of huge companies had their kids there when they certainly had the money to send their kids to private schools. He received an INCREDIBLE education and mostly took AP classes. In fact, since it was a public school, they paid for college classes if they couldn't offer you what you'd take next. For instance, he had a girlfriend who took senior AP classes her junior year so they paid for her to take college classes her senior year in those subjects.

When I was growing up I went to private schools from 5th grade until I moved in with my Dad my senior year of HS - all that money gone to waste when I graduated from a public school, lol. But again, it was in a great area and everyone I graduated with went to college and most of them are a lot more successful than I'll ever be with my mostly private school education :)

You do what YOU think is best for your kids - that's what parents do!

RogerV 01-24-2007 11:02 PM

I'm not going to send my kids to College..

I'm going to start them a business Teach them how to run it and that will be their education in the real world.. they either sink or swim after that

J$tyle$ 01-25-2007 12:07 AM

I'm not sending my kids to college either!

They better get a fuckin' scholarship or pay for it themselves after all the $ I'm spending now!

J/K

Fizzgig 01-25-2007 01:03 AM

Send them to public school in a nice area instead.

Vittorio 01-25-2007 02:23 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by J$tyle$ (Post 11780284)
might have been more :thumbsup :thumbsup

Still closing deals and tracking people down!

You know how it goes :winkwink:

I want some of that action too, ya' know? Haha!

J$tyle$ 01-25-2007 04:25 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Vittorio (Post 11787590)
I want some of that action too, ya' know? Haha!

Just saw your email but I'm heading to bed- will go through it tomorrow and we will get it going :)


All times are GMT -7. The time now is 11:30 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
©2000-, AI Media Network Inc123