Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are moving to a home zoned for South Lakes HS, and the next closest school is Madison. Do I understand it correctly that we have the option to send our child to Madison instead of South Lakes because we would prefer AP curriculum to IB? This seems too easy..
It works as long as Madison is accepting transfers for all four years as the transfer is only for one year at a time. If Madison is closed transfers, your student would go to the next closest AP HS that is open to transfers.
This bolded part hardly ever occurs. The principal makes the decision. Oftentimes schools listed as closed to transfers on Dashboard do accommodate high school curricular transfer requests just the same. Principals (and school registrars) do look at closest distance to one's home, though.
Guess what, my understanding from my friends who go there is that Madison is overcapacity and is closed to transfers right now. In past years it's been fairly easy to people place from Marshall and vice versa, but this year, a friend went to get her kid in there and was told that. All the schools are becoming a lot tighter about admissions since people often people place for reasons that have little to do with AP v. IB. So I'd check it out before you assume your child would be able to transfer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are moving to a home zoned for South Lakes HS, and the next closest school is Madison. Do I understand it correctly that we have the option to send our child to Madison instead of South Lakes because we would prefer AP curriculum to IB? This seems too easy..
It works as long as Madison is accepting transfers for all four years as the transfer is only for one year at a time. If Madison is closed transfers, your student would go to the next closest AP HS that is open to transfers.
This bolded part hardly ever occurs. The principal makes the decision. Oftentimes schools listed as closed to transfers on Dashboard do accommodate high school curricular transfer requests just the same. Principals (and school registrars) do look at closest distance to one's home, though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Go online to this FCPS page:
http://www.fcps.edu/dss/osp/StudentRegistration/student-transfer/hs.shtml
This page gives you the forms for what you want; it's referred to by the schools as a "high school curricular transfer." It is a simple process. Your child will be required to commit to taking a certain number of AP classes; there's a statement the student must sign, making that academic commitment. And your child is not entitled to any bus transportation; you will have to get your child to and from high school.
Madison would have to be open to academic transfers at the time you apply; however, the FCPS "dashboard" page that contains information such as whether schools are open for transfer is often not really correct on that score. So if you check and see the dashboard says "not open to transfers," don't stop the process based just on that. Call the school and check.
The applications are due in the spring -- don't miss the deadline, which will be on the FCPS site. I know a family that did miss it, and were told they would have to wait to apply the next spring.
You will submit the forms to South Lakes, NOT to Madison, because the student's assigned base school has to sign off on the transfer and then sends the forms to the receiving school. Your base school won't bat an eyelash at the request. But stay on top of it and check with South Lakes' registrar that the forms have moved over to Madison in good time, and check that Madison has received them.
We know quite a few families who pupil placed students for curricular reasons and no high school kid cares or asks about why another kid is "from a different neighborhood." It's just not an issue with kids this age or kids in AP or IB. They get the whole curricular transfer idea and simply don't care. That aspect of it isn't an issue at all, despite what someone posted earlier. .
It's interesting to me that your post seems skeptical of the idea of a high school curricular transfer. Maybe you feel it seems too good to be true! But yes, we are allowed this kind of choice, as long as there is room and the student makes the commitment to the academic program at the new school.
This type of "choice" should not be allowed from schools that are meeting their mandated accreditation targets. Go to your neighborhood school, move, or go to a private school. End of story. FCPS is supporting extremely thinly veiled racism.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Go online to this FCPS page:
http://www.fcps.edu/dss/osp/StudentRegistration/student-transfer/hs.shtml
This page gives you the forms for what you want; it's referred to by the schools as a "high school curricular transfer." It is a simple process. Your child will be required to commit to taking a certain number of AP classes; there's a statement the student must sign, making that academic commitment. And your child is not entitled to any bus transportation; you will have to get your child to and from high school.
Madison would have to be open to academic transfers at the time you apply; however, the FCPS "dashboard" page that contains information such as whether schools are open for transfer is often not really correct on that score. So if you check and see the dashboard says "not open to transfers," don't stop the process based just on that. Call the school and check.
The applications are due in the spring -- don't miss the deadline, which will be on the FCPS site. I know a family that did miss it, and were told they would have to wait to apply the next spring.
You will submit the forms to South Lakes, NOT to Madison, because the student's assigned base school has to sign off on the transfer and then sends the forms to the receiving school. Your base school won't bat an eyelash at the request. But stay on top of it and check with South Lakes' registrar that the forms have moved over to Madison in good time, and check that Madison has received them.
We know quite a few families who pupil placed students for curricular reasons and no high school kid cares or asks about why another kid is "from a different neighborhood." It's just not an issue with kids this age or kids in AP or IB. They get the whole curricular transfer idea and simply don't care. That aspect of it isn't an issue at all, despite what someone posted earlier. .
It's interesting to me that your post seems skeptical of the idea of a high school curricular transfer. Maybe you feel it seems too good to be true! But yes, we are allowed this kind of choice, as long as there is room and the student makes the commitment to the academic program at the new school.
This type of "choice" should not be allowed from schools that are meeting their mandated accreditation targets. Go to your neighborhood school, move, or go to a private school. End of story. FCPS is supporting extremely thinly veiled racism.
Anonymous wrote:Go online to this FCPS page:
http://www.fcps.edu/dss/osp/StudentRegistration/student-transfer/hs.shtml
This page gives you the forms for what you want; it's referred to by the schools as a "high school curricular transfer." It is a simple process. Your child will be required to commit to taking a certain number of AP classes; there's a statement the student must sign, making that academic commitment. And your child is not entitled to any bus transportation; you will have to get your child to and from high school.
Madison would have to be open to academic transfers at the time you apply; however, the FCPS "dashboard" page that contains information such as whether schools are open for transfer is often not really correct on that score. So if you check and see the dashboard says "not open to transfers," don't stop the process based just on that. Call the school and check.
The applications are due in the spring -- don't miss the deadline, which will be on the FCPS site. I know a family that did miss it, and were told they would have to wait to apply the next spring.
You will submit the forms to South Lakes, NOT to Madison, because the student's assigned base school has to sign off on the transfer and then sends the forms to the receiving school. Your base school won't bat an eyelash at the request. But stay on top of it and check with South Lakes' registrar that the forms have moved over to Madison in good time, and check that Madison has received them.
We know quite a few families who pupil placed students for curricular reasons and no high school kid cares or asks about why another kid is "from a different neighborhood." It's just not an issue with kids this age or kids in AP or IB. They get the whole curricular transfer idea and simply don't care. That aspect of it isn't an issue at all, despite what someone posted earlier. .
It's interesting to me that your post seems skeptical of the idea of a high school curricular transfer. Maybe you feel it seems too good to be true! But yes, we are allowed this kind of choice, as long as there is room and the student makes the commitment to the academic program at the new school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are moving to a home zoned for South Lakes HS, and the next closest school is Madison. Do I understand it correctly that we have the option to send our child to Madison instead of South Lakes because we would prefer AP curriculum to IB? This seems too easy..
It works as long as Madison is accepting transfers for all four years as the transfer is only for one year at a time. If Madison is closed transfers, your student would go to the next closest AP HS that is open to transfers.
Anonymous wrote:We are moving to a home zoned for South Lakes HS, and the next closest school is Madison. Do I understand it correctly that we have the option to send our child to Madison instead of South Lakes because we would prefer AP curriculum to IB? This seems too easy..
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are moving to a home zoned for South Lakes HS, and the next closest school is Madison. Do I understand it correctly that we have the option to send our child to Madison instead of South Lakes because we would prefer AP curriculum to IB? This seems too easy..
Yes, that is all it takes to game the system. Hope your child has fun explaining why they live in a "different" neighborhood.
Anonymous wrote:We are moving to a home zoned for South Lakes HS, and the next closest school is Madison. Do I understand it correctly that we have the option to send our child to Madison instead of South Lakes because we would prefer AP curriculum to IB? This seems too easy..