For Dopers who have high school diplomas (or the Canadian, UK, [insert your country here] equivalent), where did you earn your diploma?
In this poll, I will use “public” and “private” in the US sense. If your parents paid your tuition, it’s a private school. If the state paid your tuition, it’s a public school.
Newcastle Boys’ High School, which was not exactly a “plain-old public high school” since it was a selective high school. It wasn’t like a magnet school, however, since the curriculum was not specialised. And it no longer exists, having been part of a complete reorganisation of secondary schools in the city in the 1970s.
San Francisco Javier, which as the name indicates is owned by the Jesuits. Meanwhile, my brothers were across the street, at the Nuns…
The other two offers in town were a vocational High School/Community College (meaning it offers degrees at what would be those two levels in the US) and a public High School.
Dreher High School, class of 1997. Through fourth grade I went to Heathwood, one of the local private schools, because we lived way out in the country. Now a year in high school at Heathwood costs, are you ready for this? $15,000. I went to a very ritzy small private college and tuition didn’t cost that much! And this is in South Carolina, not New York City! Jesus Fucking Christ!
I am perfectly proud of my South Carolina public school education. I went to college with 27 credits already and comped out of almost every prerequisite.
Normal standard English-speaking public high school in Ontario.
(For historical and political reasons relating to the development of Canada, the Constitution Act of 1867, French/English détente, etc, Ontario has four publically-funded school systems.
There are English and French systems, and there are “public” and “separate” systems. These are full school systems, from kindergarten to the end of high school.
The “separate” schools are Catholic; the public schools were originally Protestant, but are now non-religious. This was set up at Confederation, which was, roughly-speaking, a compromise between English-speaking Protestants and French-speaking Catholics. On the census forms, there’s a checkbox to indicate whether you want your taxes to go to the public schools or the separate schools.
Thus, your kids can go to a French-speaking Catholic school, a French-speaking non-religious school, an English-speaking Catholic school, or an English-speaking non-religious school. There are also any number of private schools, for which the parents must pay the tuition (and it’s often quite pricey). These are everything from Montessori to Islamic to upper-crust establishment.
The English-speaking public schools are by far the largest schools. Private schools and separate schools have a reputation for being more rigorous academically. French-speaking schools are much thinner on the ground than English-speaking ones.)
Apologies, I did not read the actual OP. Shame on me. Ok, but it feels ‘wrong’ to pick public school. It feels like I’m admitting to being a toff. Even though by the OP definition I’m not.
Private Catholic (Jesuit) high school. They have a very well regarded Junior ROTC program, so I guess I would’ve checked ‘military/boarding’ if I’d elected to take part. The most notable alumni are Justice Antonin Scalia and Al Roker. Naturally, the school features Roker more prominently in its promotional material.