Anonymous wrote:It's fairly normal to freak out when a new program isn't what you expected. Talk to your neighbors who have kids already at he school or who have gone through it. Let them talk you off the ledge. Also, it is high school, so prepare and expect for the schedule to be completely messed up for the first week. It happens every year, mostly because so many people enroll late, and the assign classes to people who actually transferred, and everyone has to be reshuffled, etc., and then it all gets sorted out.
Anonymous wrote:You need to disenroll her from DCPS and enroll her in the new school. If she hates it, then you can reenroll her in DCPS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also, you're making some big decisions based on two days of not-school. I think you need to take a big breath, and stop drawing huge conclusions on essentially no data. Bridge isn't school, and that means the teachers aren't treating it like school. What it was supposed to be doesn't translate well to online at all. It's not a sign of how actual DL, with her actual teachers, is going to go.
Thanks for this. OP here. This helps. Here's the thing. I don't mind waiting. I WANT to give DCPS a chance. It starts August 31. The second home school begins mid-September which means she could go to DCPS for two weeks to feel it out. What I ideally want is for my child to get to be able to participate in the freshman orientation stuff at the 2nd home school, but to do that I assumed I needed to be enrolled in the second home school. But maybe if I explain the situation to them they'd allow her to participate in the orientation activities. I need to do more legwork.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Enrolling in two public schools at the same time so that you can try them out and decide which one you like best is the strangest combination of privilege and lack of privilege I have run across in a while. In any event, it is, in my opinion, immoral. I believe it is also illegal.
We did this during the summer. It's not illegal to my knowledge. We enrolled at our vacation house and our main house, both in the same state but not in the same county, while waiting on each to make their decision about learning in the fall. They did not _start_ in both schools -- we unenrolled them from one school before the school year started.
I read closely what we signed to enroll them, and there was no statement about how I acknowledge my kid isnt' enrolled in some other school or anything like that.
Anonymous wrote:Enrolling in two public schools at the same time so that you can try them out and decide which one you like best is the strangest combination of privilege and lack of privilege I have run across in a while. In any event, it is, in my opinion, immoral. I believe it is also illegal.
Anonymous wrote:Also, you're making some big decisions based on two days of not-school. I think you need to take a big breath, and stop drawing huge conclusions on essentially no data. Bridge isn't school, and that means the teachers aren't treating it like school. What it was supposed to be doesn't translate well to online at all. It's not a sign of how actual DL, with her actual teachers, is going to go.