Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Riding the bus is a privilege, not a right. If you don't like the bus route, make your own arrangements to get your child to and from school. There are many public districts in the country that do not provide free transportation to and from school.
I'm disturbed by this answer. Failing to provide transportation unfairly disadvantages poor children, children of working parents, and others who don't have the resources you might. Even though these are "magnet" programs, the children of single, poor or two-working parent families should still have equal access to these programs. Having open admissions but not providing transportation is, IMO, just another way of segregating.
Anonymous wrote:mag·net school
noun
noun: magnet school;?plural noun: magnet schools
1.
a public school offering special instruction and programs not available elsewhere, designed to attract a more diverse student body from throughout a school district.
There is nothing in the definition of a magnet that implies it must have a competitive entrance. It is all about location.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 6-year old was accepted into a MCPS magnet program about 8 miles from our home. Initially we were informed the bus would pick him up at 8:30 and then get him to school at 9:00. That sounded reasonable to us. Today we were informed that they added new stops and the pickup will now be 7:45 and he will still arrive at 9:00. Anyone else in this situation? Who should I call to complain?
Why not drive you kid in? I always just drove my child to school.
Not the OP, but there are lots of things that might make it not so simple for a person to drive their child to school -- work schedules, child care, traffic, car ownership, school location, etc.
I am at work by 7, as is my husband. We pay our nanny to be at our house early to drive our children to school.
Deal . . . Be an parent and find ways to handle logistical issues.
Pity the poor nanny's children. Who's taking care of hers when she is driving yours to school? But then again, it is no dark secret that high powered women have built their careers on the cheap labor of poorer, often immigrant, women.
whining ninnies
Why are the immersions not magnets? Are the HGCs magnets?
Anonymous wrote:Consider it free morning care!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 6-year old was accepted into a MCPS magnet program about 8 miles from our home. Initially we were informed the bus would pick him up at 8:30 and then get him to school at 9:00. That sounded reasonable to us. Today we were informed that they added new stops and the pickup will now be 7:45 and he will still arrive at 9:00. Anyone else in this situation? Who should I call to complain?
Why not drive you kid in? I always just drove my child to school.
Not the OP, but there are lots of things that might make it not so simple for a person to drive their child to school -- work schedules, child care, traffic, car ownership, school location, etc.
I am at work by 7, as is my husband. We pay our nanny to be at our house early to drive our children to school.
Deal . . . Be an parent and find ways to handle logistical issues.
whining ninnies