<p>“To me, the scariest part of this is that it smells like it is being done for budget reasons,”</p>
<p>NH doesn’t have the commitment to education that Mass has.</p>
<p>If they’re in college instead of high-school, parents can get certain tax credits and deductions under certain income amounts. The cost of NH CCs is lower than average per-student expenditures in public schools by a few thousand dollars. And kids can go after vocational training that they’re interested in.</p>
<p>On another topic, I have a coworker with a daughter that was accepted to Phillips Exeter. I assumed that she was attending but only found out this week that he’s homeschooling her. She’s quite advanced in mathematics and she’s using EPGY (they have an online high-school) for her courses.</p>
<p>I wish that all of these educational options and services were around when our kids were a lot younger.</p>