( continues...) to see if the economy is going to tank or if they'll lose their jobs between now and mid-August (when school starts).
So that's where we are. My remedies for moving forward are extremely limited until school starts. There's no guarantee I'll get anything after schools starts (I know one parent who held their child out for six weeks to get a decent assignment.) And because of various invisible weighting schemes the odds are literally stacked against Matilda.
I still don't understand how her school assignment is just blank. That's bizarre.
I still don't understand how her school assignment is just blank. That's bizarre.
They just eliminated the pretense that they had met their responsibility to assignment, and also it was probably punitive. They are actively trying to raise the numbers of middle class white kids at O'Connell, so they're saying, "Well, we GAVE you a school and you didn't like you picky little bitch, so now you get nothing."
But the reality is that O'Connell will have seats available during Open Enrollment so I could claim a seat there anyway if I wanted. But I do not.
Here are the rankings:
[link]
This includes charter schools and some other places that are specialized that wouldn't be applicable to Matilda.
As you can see Lowell is rated 10/10, and SotA (Ruth Asawa) is 9/10.
O'Connell is 2/10. "This school is rated below average in school quality compared to other schools in California. Students here perform below average on state tests, have below average college readiness measures, and this school has below average results in how well it's serving disadvantaged students."
That whole situation sounds like a lawsuit waiting to happen.
Well, David, that is ridiculous. Poor you and Matilda and JZ. I feel like Dana- how can they just leave it blank?. And, if all schools except the super duper special ones were good schools, this wouldn't be happening (duh) because it wouldn't matter so much. And as a strategy to get more wealthy people into the underperforming schools, it doesn't seem like a great stategy, because if you were wealthy, wouldn't you just pick up and go to private school?
Do they get a chance to move as a sophomore? Is there an online school she can attend for a year, or a home school group?
That whole situation sounds like a lawsuit waiting to happen.
That's what happened when I tried to place Emmett for elementary school. Basically the majority Asian neighborhoods sued saying the district was in effect trying to capture race with their "diversity index" and that was illegal. They wanted to invest in their local schools and build them up.
They were successful in that suit, and the school district had to throw out literally all of their school assignments two weeks before school started. Which is why I had no leverage with EM when she said, "Get him into a good school in SF or I'm placing him in Albany." He was not placed anywhere to start first grade in SF.
And as a strategy to get more wealthy people into the underperforming schools, it doesn't seem like a great stategy, because if you were wealthy, wouldn't you just pick up and go to private school?
That's exactly what happens. Upper middle class families either move out of SF or put their kids in private school.
A huge number of Matilda's friends who have been in public school with her since kindergarten will be moving into private school for high school.
Does anyone need an onerous task day soon? I have to do two things- call Spectrum and cancel my internet which they never actually provided (I never cancelled frontier, and though it is terrible, it exists. My work also got me a hotspot). I also have to call my dress Netflx, Gwynnie Bee, because I don't need new dresses to wear when I am not in the office. Frankly I have been wearing the same dress all week when no one sees me. I have been putting these things off since March.