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In November, President-elect Trump and his wife Melania announced that the family will keep their son Barron enrolled in his New York City-based day school rather than moving to Washington, D.C. right away.
A spokesperson for the Trump's noted that there is "obviously a sensitivity to pulling out a 10-year-old in the middle of the school year."
Barron attends Columbia Grammar and Preparatory School, located in the Upper West Side of Manhattan.
The elite school runs students about $47,000 a year.
With an eye on first kids who were teenagers or young adults when their parents lived in the White House, as far back as President Richard Nixon, Business Insider took a look at elementary, middle, or high schools they attended.
Take a look below to see who attended prep schools in the nation's capitol, and who went elsewhere.
Barron Trump — Columbia Grammar and Preparatory
Gustavo Caballero/Getty Images If Barron's $47,000-a-year tuition payment seems steep, it's nothing compared to the cost of secret service protection in New York City for the first family, which is estimated to be $1 million a day.
Sasha Obama — Sidwell Friends School
Pete Souza, via Wikimedia Commons Sasha is a sophomore at the Washington, D.C. based school that has educated multiple first kids. The Obamas have said they will stay in D.C. until Sasha graduates from high school. Sidwell costs students about $40,000 a year.
Malia Obama — Sidwell Friends School
Malia graduated from Sidwell in the spring, and announced she will be taking a gap year before starting college at Harvard University.
Jenna Bush Hager — Austin High School
AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais The younger fraternal twin daughter of President George W. Bush, Jenna, attended Austin High School, a public high school in her town. She stayed local for college as well and attended UT Austin, where she graduated with an English degree.
Barbara Pierce Bush — Austin High School
The older fraternal twin daughter of President George W. Bush, Barbara also attended public Austin High School, then left her sister for the east coast and attended Yale University for college.
Chelsea Clinton — Sidwell Friends School
The Clintons during convocation ceremonies at Stanford in 1997.AP Photo/Greg Gibson Though she attended public schools in Arkansas before her father, President Bill Clinton, was elected, Chelsea is another first kid who went to Sidwell Friends School.
Amy Carter — Stevens Elementary School and the Rose Hardy Middle School
AP Photo/Thomas D. Stevens Amy Carter, the youngest daughter of President Jimmy Carter, was nine years old when she moved into the White House. She attended D.C. Public Schools with large African-American populations, first attending Stevens Elementary School and then the Rose Hardy Middle School. The decision was was regarded as a highly symbolic act, according to the Baltimore Sun.
Tricia Nixon Cox — Sidwell Friends School and the Chapin School
The oldest daughter of President Richard Nixon, Tricia attended Sidwell Friends School while her father was in office. After Nixon lost the election to JFK, the family left Washington, D.C., and she finished up schooling at all-girls the Chapin School in Manhattan.
Julie Nixon Eisenhower — Sidwell Friends School and the Chapin School
Julie Nixon, the youngest Nixon daughter, similarly attended Sidwell Friends School and then the Chapin School.