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Re: [Phys-L] Private schools



Same place they go if they are booted from a traditional school.

Bob at PC

-----Original Message-----
From: phys-l-bounces@mail.phys-l.org [mailto:phys-l-bounces@mail.phys-
l.org] On Behalf Of Marty Weiss
Sent: Tuesday, July 10, 2012 2:45 PM
To: Phys-L@Phys-L.org
Subject: Re: [Phys-L] Private schools

All charters are public by definition... I repeat... if they get booted from the
charter where do they go?
On Jul 10, 2012, at 2:12 PM, LaMontagne, Bob wrote:

I explained how this is handled in my posting. Please reread it. This charter
is public - not private. Discipline is handled the same way it is in the rest of
the school system.

bob at PC

________________________________________
From: phys-l-bounces@mail.phys-l.org [phys-l-bounces@mail.phys-l.org]
on behalf of Marty Weiss [martweiss@comcast.net]
Sent: Tuesday, July 10, 2012 3:38 AM
To: Phys-L@Phys-L.org
Subject: Re: [Phys-L] Private schools

Maybe you think this doesn't happen there in Rhode Island, but where else
do they go? Here, and in most other places I know of they go back to their
sending school or neighborhood school where they would have gone if they
never entered the lottery in the first place. So, where do they go in RI? In
limbo? Disappeared? They have to go somewhere... unless they get
bounced into a disciplinary school which is essentially a district school for the
worst cases.



Every year we would receive (usually at the end of each report card period)
about a dozen such students who were expelled from the local parochial
schools or private schools. When I retired, charters were just getting started
so most of them took only elementary children. Our elementary schools
would receive back some of those who couldn't make it in the charter.

So, tell me... if they don't get put back into their local schools where else do
they go in Rhode Island?
On Jul 9, 2012, at 11:18 PM, LaMontagne, Bob wrote:

Do you make this up as you go along? Our college has a partnership with a
local charter and two people from my department have been on the board.
Once a student is in, he's in. The student can be booted out of school
(suspended) for disruptive behavior, but cannot be booted to another school
in the district.

Bob at PC

________________________________________
From: phys-l-bounces@mail.phys-l.org [phys-l-bounces@mail.phys-l.org]
on behalf of Marty Weiss [martweiss@comcast.net]
Sent: Monday, July 09, 2012 4:17 PM
To: Phys-L@Phys-L.org
Subject: Re: [Phys-L] Private schools

That is a misnomer... the lottery is composed of those students whose
parents were interested enough to enter the lottery in the first place. Of
those, the retention is selective to those who obey the rules. They have
kicked out students who disobey or whose parents do not attend meetings
and conferences. Then they go back to the lottery non-winners to choose
the next one.

On Jul 9, 2012, at 3:56 PM, LaMontagne, Bob wrote:



-----Original Message-----
From: phys-l-bounces@mail.phys-l.org
[mailto:phys-l-bounces@mail.phys- l.org] On Behalf Of John Denker
Sent: Monday, July 09, 2012 1:04 PM
To: Phys-L@Phys-L.org
Subject: Re: [Phys-L] Private schools

On 07/09/2012 06:47 AM, Jeff Bigler wrote:

As I occasionally say to my students, "Where's That
From?"--acronym intended.

ROTFL here. That's a keeper.

I'm finding that,
compared with the charter school, my public-school students ........

I realize it is conventional to speak of charter schools as being
disjoint from the public schools, but one could argue for the
following taxonomy
instead:

schools
/ \
/ \
/ \
publicly private
funded & \
tested \
/ \ \
/ \ \
/ \ \
district charter truly
public public private
schools schools schools

(see also below)

As always, I don't want to argue about the terminology, and I would
be delighted if somebody could suggest some better terminology, but
the underlying point remains: I find it helpful to distinguish
charter schools from _district_ schools (rather than from "public"
schools).
*) In some ways, the charter schools are unlike the district
schools, for instance in having more selective admissions and
selective retention. This is an important distinction; however ...


[LaMontagne, Bob]
Depends where you live. Our charter schools in RI admit students by
lottery.
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_______________________________________________
Forum for Physics Educators
Phys-l@mail.phys-l.org
http://www.phys-l.org/mailman/listinfo/phys-l
_______________________________________________
Forum for Physics Educators
Phys-l@mail.phys-l.org
http://www.phys-l.org/mailman/listinfo/phys-l

_______________________________________________
Forum for Physics Educators
Phys-l@mail.phys-l.org
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