Cathy Larson
  • Home
  • Resume
  • Writing Portfolio
  • Educational Blog

Inter-District Transfers

9/17/2014

0 Comments

 
When my husband and I found out I was pregnant with my son, we decided to start researching the schools in the neighborhood where we lived at the time. We are both college graduates and wanted our children to have the type of quality education and experiences we had while growing up. What we found at the neighborhood school was a little disconcerting – we made a decision pretty quickly we wanted to move. We started looking for neighborhoods where the schools were high-performing and the students college-bound. It didn’t take us long to find Los Alamitos, put our first house on the market, and move into Rossmoor with the hope that this small district would provide just what we were looking for.

When we made the decision to move, it was based on quite a few factors. LAUSD offered:

  • a small-community feel with large-district course offerings and opportunities for students
  • intimate elementary schools tucked into the neighborhoods so our kids could walk to school
  • community pride in school sports and activities
  • the potential for our kids to make life-long friends because of the tendency for Los Al graduates to return “home” to raise their own families
  • well-educated parents who prioritize education and college attendance
  • involved parents and volunteers all working towards a common goal

We ended up with two kids, and both of our kids have attended Los Al schools since Kindergarten. What we’ve found in the last seven years is:

  • more than 30% of their classrooms year-over-year have been made up of inter-district transfer students
  • a growing fear of my children being unable to play high school sports because of the sheer number of students trying out for limited spots
  • my kids are making friends with kids outside of the neighborhood, limiting their ability to simply “go outside to play”
  • increased traffic inside our intimate neighborhoods, perpetuating even more traffic because neighborhood parents don’t want their children in potential danger from speeding cars
  • over-crowded schools
  • increased fundraising requests to help pay for more programs for more children

I decided to check out the California Ed Code. What are districts legally able to offer and restrict with regard to inter-district transfers?

“Policies regarding …inter-district/reciprocal agreement transfers are the responsibility of each local district governing board and are not within the jurisdiction of the California Department of Education. Each local district governing board has ultimate authority over general education processes such as district transfers. Parents/guardians shall work with their local school district administration to share their concerns and to determine what local processes their district has in place regarding district transfers.”


Interesting.

I initially believed a school district was required to offer a free and public education to all students. Turns out this is only true of your own in-district kids.

“California law requires school districts to provide an education to any student who resides within the district’s attendance area. Although students have the right under California law to a free, public education, the law does not guarantee that a student can attend the school of his or her choice, or even the neighborhood school.”

Interesting.

Our own district kids may not be able to attend their own neighborhood school? This gets me thinking about the inter-district transfers again. Could it be true that in addition to the challenges I’ve been experiencing the past seven years, we also have been filling seats with transfer students and displacing our own district kids?

I’d like to see our district return to the small-community district I know it has been in the past and can be again. I want to see our local children get first-right-of-refusal for participation in athletics, activities, academic courses, and the arts. I am ready to eliminate the inter-district transfer students.

Will we see financial repercussions?

Possibly.

Is it worth taking a close look at our options, thinking outside the box, and re-evaluating our district priorities? 

Absolutely.

Who’s with me?

0 Comments

    Archives

    July 2016
    June 2016
    May 2016
    April 2016
    March 2016
    February 2016
    January 2016
    December 2015
    November 2015
    October 2015
    September 2015
    October 2014
    September 2014
    August 2014

    Categories

    All
    21st Century Classroom
    21st Century Curriculum
    College And Career
    Common Core
    Communication
    Culture
    Curriculum
    Equity
    Funding
    Fundraising
    Homework
    Instructional Minutes
    Inter District Transfers
    Inter-District Transfers
    Intervention
    Literacy
    Rigor
    Safety
    School Board
    School Calendar
    Stress
    Student Engagement
    Summer
    Summer Loss
    Teachers
    Technology In The Classroom
    Traffic
    Transparency
    Writing

    RSS Feed

Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.