- Posted by Kathy489
on 10/6/12 at 8:50pmI thought you could choose your school, anyway, because of the "no child left behind act?" Or don't they have that anymore?
- Posted by jillbailey26
on 10/6/12 at 8:50pm (7 likes)Don't get caught. That's all I have to say about it..
- Posted by jillbailey26
on 10/6/12 at 8:51pmQuoting Kathy489:
I thought you could choose your school, anyway, because of the "no child left behind act?" Or don't they have that anymore?
It's still there, but there are also school districts.
- Posted by MrsNewman
on 10/6/12 at 8:53pmWe have school of choice here.
- Posted by mjande4
on 10/6/12 at 8:56pm (2 likes)We have open enrollment here. My kids go to a different school then they are currently zoned for too. We bought our house based on these school boundaries and then they were redrawn about 3 years into my oldest going there. We stayed. We must provide our own transportation, but other than that we can go to any school we choose. - Posted by Kathy489
on 10/6/12 at 8:57pmI guess it depends on whether she is talking about choosing a school in her district, or if she chose a whole other district. I'm not clear. Either way, I would check into it. Many places still follow the "school of your choice" policy under "no child left behind," as long as it's in your district probably.
Quoting jillbailey26:
Quoting Kathy489:
I thought you could choose your school, anyway, because of the "no child left behind act?" Or don't they have that anymore?
It's still there, but there are also school districts.
- Posted by epaolini
on 10/6/12 at 8:57pmin nevada we have specific school we should be sneding our kids too. for funding issues and crap like that i think its bs....but that could be why nevda is 50th in educaion..
- Posted by jillbailey26
on 10/6/12 at 8:59pm (2 likes)Where I live, there are specific school zones. You send your kid to the school where you're zoned for them to go.
Quoting Kathy489:
I guess it depends on whether she is talking about choosing a school in her district, or if she chose a whole other district. I'm not clear. Either way, I would check into it. Many places still follow the "school of your choice" policy under "no child left behind," as long as it's in your district probably.
Quoting jillbailey26:
Quoting Kathy489:
I thought you could choose your school, anyway, because of the "no child left behind act?" Or don't they have that anymore?
It's still there, but there are also school districts.
- Posted by CrazedMomof2
on 10/6/12 at 8:59pmWe did that for 4 years. We had to get district transfers from both schools. Not a big deal. - Posted by periwinkle163
on 10/6/12 at 9:02pm (1 like)Here we can request transfers, our kids go to a school that has half the amount of kids as the school we are zoned for. Almost everything about their school is better than the school we are zoned for, the grades, the test scores, the student-teacher ratio, the PTO, the parent involvement. We received a choice transfer for my dsbecause the school we are zoned for had such bad test scores that they were on academic probation. Choice transfers are allowed to stay at their chosen school as if they lived in the district, he can't be bumped if there are to many kids one year. By the time my dd started kindergarten our zone school was off probation so she is just a regular transfer and we will have to refill out transfer papers each year. It's a bit of a pain but so worth it to have them in one of the top performing school in our district.