Anonymous wrote:so a rising 9th grader would go to old HS for one year and then switch? it seems more reasonable that once you're in a school you can stay thru the terminal grade
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does your kid get to finish out high school in the current school with a COSA or your kid has to go to the new school that you will be zoned for?
My kid will be in 9th grade in 2026-27. I am wondering what will happen for 10th grade since our high school will most likely be changed.
The superintendent has said he plans to recommend to the Board that rising 7th and 10th graders have to move to the new school, while rising 8th, 11th, and 12th graders get to stay at the old school.
It’s really disruptive to the rising 10th graders.
And the rising 7th graders. At least for the 10th graders there's some justification before you don't want the new high schools to have only freshmen in them and take 3 full years to fill up. But the middle schoolers are just changing places, not filling any empty schools, so there's no good reason to make the 7th graders switch besides "that's the way we've always done it."
High school is more detrimental as they need to apply for college. If they feel depressed during the change(e.g., leaving their friends), this has more impact on their future.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does your kid get to finish out high school in the current school with a COSA or your kid has to go to the new school that you will be zoned for?
My kid will be in 9th grade in 2026-27. I am wondering what will happen for 10th grade since our high school will most likely be changed.
The superintendent has said he plans to recommend to the Board that rising 7th and 10th graders have to move to the new school, while rising 8th, 11th, and 12th graders get to stay at the old school.
It’s really disruptive to the rising 10th graders.
And the rising 7th graders. At least for the 10th graders there's some justification before you don't want the new high schools to have only freshmen in them and take 3 full years to fill up. But the middle schoolers are just changing places, not filling any empty schools, so there's no good reason to make the 7th graders switch besides "that's the way we've always done it."
Anonymous wrote:so a rising 9th grader would go to old HS for one year and then switch? it seems more reasonable that once you're in a school you can stay thru the terminal grade
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does your kid get to finish out high school in the current school with a COSA or your kid has to go to the new school that you will be zoned for?
My kid will be in 9th grade in 2026-27. I am wondering what will happen for 10th grade since our high school will most likely be changed.
The superintendent has said he plans to recommend to the Board that rising 7th and 10th graders have to move to the new school, while rising 8th, 11th, and 12th graders get to stay at the old school.
It’s really disruptive to the rising 10th graders.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does your kid get to finish out high school in the current school with a COSA or your kid has to go to the new school that you will be zoned for?
My kid will be in 9th grade in 2026-27. I am wondering what will happen for 10th grade since our high school will most likely be changed.
The superintendent has said he plans to recommend to the Board that rising 7th and 10th graders have to move to the new school, while rising 8th, 11th, and 12th graders get to stay at the old school.
Anonymous wrote:Does your kid get to finish out high school in the current school with a COSA or your kid has to go to the new school that you will be zoned for?
My kid will be in 9th grade in 2026-27. I am wondering what will happen for 10th grade since our high school will most likely be changed.
Anonymous wrote:Current 5th and 7th graders will end up having to switch schools after 6th and 9th grades because of the boundary changes.
Anonymous wrote:My understanding is this based on their legacy policy - Current high school students are allowed to stay at their original school through graduation, even if their home address falls into a new boundary zone.