What is AJE? |
My child is in a "private" school paid for by FCPS. All the students at the school are placed by various school systems. FWIW, the families that we know did not hire lawyers or advocates to get private placement for their child (FCPS-I have heard MCPS is a different story). It is more cost effective for FCPS to send a child to a contract services school then to education that particular child in a mainstream school. There are very few private schools that have contracts with the school systems to provide services. The schools my child has attended and we have toured have been absolutely bare bones. No one would choose to send their child to once of these schools if their child could attend their local FCPS school. People aren't plotting and scheming to get into the Phillips School, etc. The education is very poor compared to public schools in every way. |
That breaks my heart and I am sorry to hear it. I just looks at Phillips School's website and it all sounds beautiful-their dedication to making things work, etc, but I am sorry to hear the reality of these places can be different. I do assume it varies by school? I met one parent years ago who felt like the program her kid was placed in was life changing and the plan was to then bring him back to the public school system. |
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Do you feel this overwrought when you discover that rich families are sending their children to magnet programs at public schools instead of private schools? Is that an equal abuse of taxpayer dollars? Or is it just the disabled kids who shouldn't get a free ride?
Do you believe we should have an income cap in general for public schools, OP? Not willing to go there? |
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OP it may not seem fair, but the public school system guarantees an education to every child whether they can afford tuition at a private school or not. This applies to children without special needs, who would attend and participate in a regular classroom, or kids who have SN and applying appropriate accommodations for them.
Just as there is no income cap for providing a regular public classroom for a child, there is no income cap for providing SN services for a child who needs them, including private placement if that is needed for that child to receive an education. The part where you should decide things can be unfair is that wealthy parents may be more unable to hire a lawyer to aggressively advocate for their child getting what they need in the public system than parents with few means. But the solution to that problem is not an income cap for private placement but instead a system where we are more fair consistent and reasonable about getting appropriate services for all SN children without lawyers being needed. |