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No Child Left BehindSchool choice, AYP 2006-07Frequently Asked Questions« Return to School Choice home | Printable version of FAQs (PDF)
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| Title I School | Receiving schools |
|---|---|
| Chinook | Lake Hood/Northwood |
| Creekside Park | Chester Valley/Nunaka Valley |
| Fairview | Turnagain/Lake Hood |
| North Star | Turnagain/Lake Hood |
| William Tyson | Chester Valley/Nunaka Valley |
| Abbott Loop/Kasuun | |
| Willow Crest | Lake Hood/Northwood |
Clark Middle School will be closed for construction during the 2007-08 and 2008- 09 school years; therefore, students living within Clark’s former boundaries have been zoned to attend other middle schools in the district. Since there are no Title I middle schools, no public school choice options are available for middle school students in the 2007-08 school year.
Ptarmigan and Tudor, as the only Level 2 Title I schools for the 2007-08 school year, are participating in year two of a pilot program that offers supplemental educational services (free tutoring) to eligible students instead of offering public school choice.
Title I schools (in the ASD) that are in an NCLB School Improvement status of Level 3 or higher must offer both school choice and supplemental educational services (free tutoring to eligible students). Parents of students eligible for this free tutoring program will be notified in August 2007 and provided with a list of approved Providers. Families that opt for public school choice are not eligible to participate in the free tutoring program.
Chinook, Creekside, Fairview, North Star, Tyson, Williwaw, and Willow Crest will be offering both public school choice and supplemental educational services in the 2007-08 school year.
As approved by state and federal authorities, Whaley and AVAIL will only be offering supplemental educational services instead of public school choice because they are unique programs that are not duplicated elsewhere in the district; thus, school choice is not an available option for these two locations.
No. According to NCLB, the district decides which schools will be offered as receiving schools. See chart above for schools of choice for each school.
August 17, 2007. Turn applications in to your child’s neighborhood school prior to the deadline. The school staff is to fax the form to the ASD Director of Accountability on the day that it is received.
Yes. Your school is working hard in partnership with parents to make sure that each and every child receives an excellent education.
The District will provide transportation to approved students in Title I schools that are in an NCLB School Improvement Level of 3 or higher (see details and exceptions above). At least one bus stop will be at the neighborhood school. If the neighborhood school is a walking school, it will be the only bus stop. In some other cases, stops will be established in neighborhoods. If you choose to transfer your student, the ASD Transportation Office will notify you regarding where and what time your child would meet the bus. The ASD cannot finalize transportation details until after the August 17th deadline because Transportation staff must first know where all students who apply actually live.
Not necessarily. Title I schools receive extra funding and often have more staff in the areas of Bilingual Education and Indian Education. Also, though Title I schools have breakfast programs, not all receiving schools do. Several Title I schools also have 21st Century after school programs for students. That is not true of all schools. For specific information on the programs offered at each school, please see the “Information on School Choice” sheet provided at your neighborhood school, at the District’s information desk at 5530 East Northern Lights Blvd., or on our Web site at www.asdk12.org/NCLB.
Seats may be limited if the number of requests exceeds health and safety limits for the school. The law requires that priority go to the lowest achieving, low-income students. In that situation, if your student were not eligible for your first choice school, you would be contacted and given the option of the other school if it had seats remaining.
If seats are available at a parent’s preferred receiving school, the parent would also be offered the option to transfer the student until September 7, at which point staffing for our schools is complete based on student numbers and the Public School Choice application period must necessarily close for the 2007-08 school year.
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