Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No
Why?
NP. Why would you have a case? What's the specific legal theory and under what authority would you sue? You generally can't use the courts to argue that an elected part of government isn't achieving their goals in the way you'd like.
Anonymous wrote:Instead of reflexively getting angry about what your kid can't have, why don't you think about what would happen if every single MCPS high school was required to offer exactly the same classes?
There would be no specialization at all and fewer advanced courses, OP. Because no high school has the room to accommodate that many different classrooms. There is no money to pay for additions to all these buildings (and some don't have the room for additions anyway because they're squeezed in urban blocks). The budget isn't big enough to pay all the required teachers assigned to every school.
"If my kid can't have it, then no one can have it".
This is essentially what you're doing.
My kids are in college and high school, they won't see all that regional stuff. My oldest studied AP Latin at Walter Johnson, and as far as I know, it's the only MCPS high school that offers it - and it might not anymore, under the regional concept. My youngest attends a different high school that has IB, but since she's not in the IB programme, they don't have anything special. None of us in the family begrudge the fact that others have other opportunities.
Anonymous wrote:I’m not a lawyer but I don’t think you have a case. Equity does not mean providing the exact same programs at every school. The school district is legally obligated to provide free access to a reasonable education approved by the state and it fulfills that requirement. As long as it is providing equivalent opportunities in each region, there is no basis to sue. Equivalent is different from identical. If only certain regions had access to specialized programming, then you could sue. But every region has specialized programs. You’re just not happy with the actual selection in your region. But it is impossible to satisfy every family in every region so the bar would be impossible to meet for MCPS
Anonymous wrote:There are 26 different schools now and most have different programs. Moving forward you will have more access to different programs, not less. Why would you sue?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No
Why?
Anonymous wrote:No