| One bad thing can be the purpose and or bias in a private school. There are very good ones. There are very bad ones too. Access to good private education takes more money than the majority of Americans have. Charter schools often pop up, look sexy, and vary extremely widely. Again some good, a lot of "meh" and some bad. The idea behind robust public education is the majority would get a good education regardless of their economic position. I had pretty great public education, and I was poor in a backward town too. We have declined a shocking amount! It just so happens I can remember every year. Odd. But, useful to compare to my own kids education. We were in better shape economically, but the quality was spotty throughout. And it was stripped down. A move to more private, or no public is likely a downgrade for way too many people, IMHO. |
I went to a fairly traditional private school (cost: $8k/yr) and absolutely hated it, but still did well. Eventually my hatred turned into a complete mental breakdown, I refused to go anymore, and after a search transferred to a super fancy independent study school (cost: $15k/yr) where I got to meet one-on-one with my teachers, or in small classes of less than 5 students. This school cured my depression in a few months and developed my intellectual and artistic passions over the next couple of years. Several of my friends followed me there in the next year or two, with similar positive effects on their sanity. If only everyone had this opportunity! Alas, Seattle spends only $15k per student in their public schools :-( Here's the data for all 50 states as a whole [1].
> Charter schools often pop up, look sexy, and vary extremely widely. Again some good, a lot of "meh" and some bad.
This is famously true of different public school districts as well. I'm not willing to discount anything that help move us away from the deranged format of traditional schools.
[1] https://education.cu-portland.edu/blog/classroom-resources/p...