I went to a private school myself for quite a long time. While it wasn't
quite that small (60-70 people per grade by high school), there's... well, there's upsides and downsides to it.
Pro: You get a great education (or at least, you should if it's a good private school, which it certainly seems like from the teachers' backgrounds you've listed), and the dual-courses thing sounds tough but extremely nice (although there's an associated con). I list tough courses as a pro because god damn, much as they are a huge bitch to do well in, they help you improve your writing ability and critical thinking so much. I was able to excel through my entire first year of university because my intensive high school education was significantly harder than the stuff I was subject to then, and it's only recently that I'm starting to really feel challenged (and still largely because of workload).
Con: University (or college, or whatever) is to me one of the most important socializing processes of an adult's education because (on top of being the first chance you ever really get to live on your own without jumping right in to the working world) it's the time where you meet a crazy-wide-diverse group of people and make friends you keep for the rest of your life. If you're cutting two years off that... I don't know, I don't see it being so great. Also, this great private school education comes at a very hefty price (as you've noted).
Money-If I went for all of high school, it'd cost 26,000 USD. That's more than college, right? 4 years in college is roughly 20K for tuition normally, right?
I'm not sure where you got your numbers for college tuition, I go to university of maryland and pay around 5k per semester.
I think that he meant 'overall expenses per year' - my tuition's 6k, but throw in food and living expenses and books and house supplies and all sorts of stuff and it really totals up quickly. My annual expenses are more like 15k, with a bit higher tuition and some very frugal spending habits
Pro: There are so few people around that's it's hard to not bond with new friends, or feel like you're an outsider, or deal with bullying or anything like that.
Con: There are so few people around that your choice of friends are... limited. I had some great friends in my high school, but in reflection I don't really care about most of them any more except for the three or four people I really connected with. On top of that, you are going to be stuck with the same dating pool for quite some time, as will everyone else (I guess you probably won't be too interested in the 3-5 other girls who will actually be at this crazy school-for-eight-people though, so get ready to look elsewhere). And though you can keep your old friends, sure, you
will find yourself slowly drifting out of touch with them.
Overall the education is just... unreal, really, and you more or less
have to come out of it with some capability in critical thinking, but I find socially it really restricted me. I have a great, wide group of close friends at university, but in a private high school I just felt like I was stagnating all the time, more or less forced to be friends with people who I didn't really share all that many interests with. Since you're still in middle school, you may want to consider hanging around in there until it's high school time and reconsidering then, or possibly looking at other private schools (I was initially thinking 8 kids a grade, which was pretty small in itself, but 8 kids total over six grades is just unreal, and will compound heavily on both the pros and cons of friend relations I've listed above). If you do decide to go ahead with this, I'd heavily advocate getting involved in something with a big social group of kids your own age outside of school so you actually
have a social pool.
I have to admit, I am a bit confused as to why a boy who believes that girls who don't talk to him are PMSing is going to an exclusive private school, but I notice you listed no social scientists, so I imagine this isn't the sort of school where you are trained to question societal norms.
ice burnnnnnnnnSo yeah, it's not costing you more than university. Not that it's your problem: It's not your money.
Absolutely. If your parents are considering this at all, it means they can afford it, and that's something you should not feel guilty over taking advantage of (so long as you don't dick around and do terribly out of laziness and basically waste the experience).
That said, the negative side that you haven't thought of is that when you get to university, unless you're with a bunch of other trust fund babies, you will be that guy. The college-goers here know who I mean. The kind who has gone to a private school for the formulative years of all their life and has, because of this, not come into contact with any of the lower classes and is completely ignorant about all the issues they face. Find yourself some rich friends to hang out with, because us normals will only associate with you if you are incompetent enough to be controlled.
Big exaggeration from my point of view - All my friends are just average kids, about half of which are using student loans to get through university, and I'm certainly not 'that guy' (nor am I magically 'ignorant to all the issues "you normals" face'). Of course I do know a few people with some massive entitlement issues and horrible social deficiencies, but they are few and far between, and I avoid them as much as possible :\
And if you're really on the fence about the whole thing after a fair period of deliberation, do it for the chainsaw garden because
holy shit man
chainsaw garden