Anonymous wrote:When we moved I wanted to keep my daughter at her same school. She had already moved once from out of states dealt with Covid lockdown and just got an IEP. They would approve the change and gave us options of the 2 closer schools nervous that had open spots. It was not her previous school which was further away. We opted to keep her at the new school. Since our reason was to keep her at the old school for her IEP. They may approve it but they tell you the school and you are responsible for transportation
Anonymous wrote:
Why do your kids have so many mental health problems?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm still confused. It's just a form you fill out and your doctor signs. It's really not as hard as you're making it out to be. If the school is open for transfers and the doctor fills out the form and signs it, you're unlikely to be rejected. Just fill out the form, submit it, and go from there. I wouldn't escalate this unless or until the school says no.
You are posting incorrect information. You wrote “If the school is open for transfers…” There is NO place on the form to indicate which school you would like to attend. NONE. If the transfer is accepted for a social/emotional reason, the student registration office works with the region leadership to identify a school based on proximity and enrollment numbers. You do not get to choose which school you want. You either take the school offered or you remain at the school. That’s it.
Anonymous wrote:1. Submit the medical provider information and form to the base school.
2. The base school principal acknowledges this in SIS.
3. The enrolling parent can then go into the Student Transfer portal to request to remain at the current school (if family has moved) OR request the new school.
The portal will only show you schools that are open to student transfer. If the school that you want isn’t on the list, then they are not open to student transfers - likely because that school or grade level is at capacity. There is no way around this. Hiring an attorney, going to the school board, or even the region will not change this process.
The request has to be approved by both principals and central office.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm still confused. It's just a form you fill out and your doctor signs. It's really not as hard as you're making it out to be. If the school is open for transfers and the doctor fills out the form and signs it, you're unlikely to be rejected. Just fill out the form, submit it, and go from there. I wouldn't escalate this unless or until the school says no.
You are posting incorrect information. You wrote “If the school is open for transfers…” There is NO place on the form to indicate which school you would like to attend. NONE. If the transfer is accepted for a social/emotional reason, the student registration office works with the region leadership to identify a school based on proximity and enrollment numbers. You do not get to choose which school you want. You either take the school offered or you remain at the school. That’s it.
Anonymous wrote:You are going to spend a lot of money on an attorney. They will happily take thousands. Don’t do it. Just find a private school you like instead.
Or a cheaper option is to find a rental near a school you like and stay there a few nights each week. See, I said stay there, so don’t jump on me DCUM for suggesting residency fraud. That would be the cheapest option.
We put our kid in private school rather than hire an attorney for anything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm still confused. It's just a form you fill out and your doctor signs. It's really not as hard as you're making it out to be. If the school is open for transfers and the doctor fills out the form and signs it, you're unlikely to be rejected. Just fill out the form, submit it, and go from there. I wouldn't escalate this unless or until the school says no.
You are posting incorrect information. You wrote “If the school is open for transfers…” There is NO place on the form to indicate which school you would like to attend. NONE. If the transfer is accepted for a social/emotional reason, the student registration office works with the region leadership to identify a school based on proximity and enrollment numbers. You do not get to choose which school you want. You either take the school offered or you remain at the school. That’s it.
Anonymous wrote:I'm still confused. It's just a form you fill out and your doctor signs. It's really not as hard as you're making it out to be. If the school is open for transfers and the doctor fills out the form and signs it, you're unlikely to be rejected. Just fill out the form, submit it, and go from there. I wouldn't escalate this unless or until the school says no.