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2016 年的文章,应该还可以参考
Are private schools worth the money?
https://www.nzherald.co.nz/lifes ... p;objectid=11576894
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About 85 per cent of all students in New Zealand attend state schools. Of the remaining 15 per cent, 11.5 per cent go to state integrated schools - funded by the state, but able to charge for facilities.
Many prominent integrated schools are Catholic - Baradene, St Peter's, Sacred Heart - and they charge students anywhere from a few hundred dollars a year to almost $5000 a year.
That leaves about 3.5 per cent of all students in New Zealand at private schools. In Auckland, the figure is around 5.5 per cent. With small fluctuations, these numbers have stayed reasonably consistent since the turn of the century and they are low by international standards. In Australia, around 40 per cent of all students attend private schools.
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Private schools can set their own fees and also decide what else they want to charge for. For instance, In addition to its $19,625 tuition fee, St Kentigern College charges a non-refundable application fee of $300, a non-refundable enrolment acceptance fee of $900, a compulsory association fee of $575, a compulsory notebook computer purchase of approximately $2000, a software licence fee of $250, estimated uniform costs of $1200, a publications fee of $220, various charges for "sports trips and activities" and various "other curriculum-related charges" including, but not limited to, field trips, workbooks, camps and education outside the classroom.
The variable nature of such costs and the way different schools charge for them means it's difficult to put a definite figure on a private education. But for the top rung of schools, $20,000 per year is a conservative figure (at King's College, fees for year 12 and 13 students are $24,093). For parents wanting to put two children through seven years of schooling, from years 7-13, that's a starting figure of $280,000.
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Trying to get your child into a high-performing, high-decile state school can be even more expensive than paying to send your children to private school. A Herald article last year showed that where the Auckland Grammar School zone splits a street in two, in-zone houses cost up to $272,000 more than comparable houses across the road. Over the life of a 20-year mortgage, with interest, the total extra cost of buying that in-zone house could be close to $500,000.
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Annual fees
King's College
$24,093 (years 12-13)
St Cuthbert's College
$21,224 (years 7-13)
Diocesan School for Girls
$20,480 (years 7-13)
Kristin
$20,380 (years 11-13)
St Kentigern College
$19,625 (years 7-13)
ACG Parnell College
$19,380 (years 11-13)
$18,500 (years 12, 13)
Pinehurst Senior College
$16,134 (years 9-13)
State-integrated schools
Baradene College
$4628.80 (year 13)
Sacred Heart College
$3768 (years 9-13)
St Peter's College
$3164 (years 9-13)
Carmel College
$2366 (years 9-13)
McAuley High School
$792 (years 9-13)
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Five things you could spend the money on
1: Put $20,000 a year in Kiwisaver for them.
According to sorted.org.nz, if you deposit a lump sum of $100,000 in Kiwisaver at high school leaving age, that could turn into $445,695, adjusted for inflation, by their retirement age. That's even before your children have made any of their own contributions over the subsequent 48 years.
2: Take the family on a grand overseas trip every year your child is at high school.
You could try a new continent each time, although, with only five years, you'll have to skip a couple. For under $10,000, you could take the 11-day Intrepid Travel Borneo Family Adventure. "Learn how orphaned orangutans are rehabilitated back into the wild, swim among colourful fish and spot wildlife in Borneo's steamy jungles. Along the way, make friends with local villagers, try delicious cuisine and enjoy plenty of time to kick back and relax."
3: Give your child the gift of intensive sports training.
One-on-one tennis lessons can be had for $60 an hour. Two of those every week for a year will cost a total of $6240. Or, if you really believe your little one could go the full Federer, you could get lessons every week day for a year for $15,600.
4: Make up for any deficiencies in academic talent.
Private tutoring varies wildly but many advertise their services for around $40 an hour. Five hours of tutoring a week across the 40 weeks of the school year will set you back $8000.
5: If you've got an aspiring dancer:
The best training ground is not school but The Palace, the studio of New Zealand's world-beating dance queen, Parris Goebel. Two private lessons a week at The Palace each week of the school year will cost about $8000.
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