Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You'd have to find a school with room that will accept a transfer and provide your own transportation. In this climate, you're heading to parts of South Arlington.
But it really depends on the issue. My kid is miserable in school, period. He doesn't want to go to any school. Make sure you have isolated the cause that it's really linked to a specific school or person. If it's something related to your child's needs, changing schools isn't going to help.
I can't tell if your child is in HS and the only way you'll pull them from Yorktown is if you can magically get them a spot at HB. Or if you have kid in far north Arlington at Jamestown, for example, and you want to push to get them in ASFS as being academically acceptable.
Focus on your child's needs, and if it's that bad, then whereever you put them should be better psychologically.
Anonymous wrote:You'd have to find a school with room that will accept a transfer and provide your own transportation. In this climate, you're heading to parts of South Arlington.
But it really depends on the issue. My kid is miserable in school, period. He doesn't want to go to any school. Make sure you have isolated the cause that it's really linked to a specific school or person. If it's something related to your child's needs, changing schools isn't going to help.
Anonymous wrote:If my child was so miserable they wanted to die, avoiding the school with slightly lower SOL scores wouldn't even be on my priority list.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't give too many details because I'm considering lawyering up. I just wanted to understand if and to what extent APS has a duty to transfer child if their current school is causing such misery as to make the child wish they were dead. Is the duty, if it exists, limited to just finding the child a different school or must they also ensure other things such as very good academics which exist in the current school is available in the transfer school?
Is someone has any references, I'd be most grateful
I can't imagine what you mean op. All of APS has excellent academics. That shouldn't be a consideration for transfer.
APS has some good elementary schools, one or two good middle schools, and no excellent high schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't give too many details because I'm considering lawyering up. I just wanted to understand if and to what extent APS has a duty to transfer child if their current school is causing such misery as to make the child wish they were dead. Is the duty, if it exists, limited to just finding the child a different school or must they also ensure other things such as very good academics which exist in the current school is available in the transfer school?
Is someone has any references, I'd be most grateful
I can't imagine what you mean op. All of APS has excellent academics. That shouldn't be a consideration for transfer.
Anonymous wrote:I can't give too many details because I'm considering lawyering up. I just wanted to understand if and to what extent APS has a duty to transfer child if their current school is causing such misery as to make the child wish they were dead. Is the duty, if it exists, limited to just finding the child a different school or must they also ensure other things such as very good academics which exist in the current school is available in the transfer school?
Is someone has any references, I'd be most grateful