I wrote that article years ago - I too have 2 kids who went to private schools - have also experienced public and homeschooled too. Each suited individual kids at particular stages - removed our youngest from a public shool because of enormous stress around his dyslexia - the school we chose was brilliant and his confidence soared (as did his learning when he was no longer stressed). Certainly 'elitist' wasnt the best choice of words -sorry - please dont be defensive. We too went without / made choices to manage this and for this child and our other who went to a Steiner school, it truly was an investment - On the other hand, our kids who didnt experience private education have done really well - Larissa was the only student in one of her uni classes who hadnt been to a private school (she was homeschooled throughout primary years, went to a small community school then Swinburne Senior secondary in year 11 and 12). She never got less than HDs at uni (3 degrees) and is extremely conscious of social justice issues (did placements in public mental health).
I think the important factor is to fit the school to the child, be confident whatever your choices - private or public - ultimately it is your own nurturing, modelling and family values that will have the biggest influence on the outcome for your child - eg when James was in grade 5 he was the only kid in his class who knew who Nelson Mandela and Martin Luther King were - the teachers were blown away by his 'general knowledge' - I wouldnt expect my kids NOT to know this.
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