Maybe, but the number of teachers are given based on the number of kids enrolled before the school year starts. So if enough kids enroll after teacher numbers/classrooms have been allocated, then new classrooms have to open up to accommodate them. Perhaps not as much of a school capacity issue as a classroom capacity issue, not to mention it disrupts the established kids and classes. |
It’s not even a classroom capacity thing — it’s more of a teacher capacity thing. Hiring a good teacher in the middle of the year is hard. Having an additional class added is usually great though since it brings down the class sizes overall. Only downside is it’s disruptive for the kids that get moved. |
Yes, that’s why they push families to register kids early so they can have the appropriate number of classes per grade before school starts. |
Eww, no. |
Granted I can’t afford a $2m house, but it would take a lot for me to send my child to a Catholic school. Some of us have values. |
I think a lot of people are just trying to do the best they can for their kids. The foundation of the entire public school system (the “good” schools) is actually a product of overtly racist housing policy. So I’m not sure that the values are much better there…. |