Magnet Schools Pull Communities Apart
- Share via
“Magnet Schools: A Tilted Playing Field” (Opinion, May 27) does a good job describing LAUSD’s convoluted magnet application system but overlooks the greater problem--how that system devastates neighborhood schools.
Parents play the waiting-list game in elementary school to accumulate points to compete for middle-school magnets. As Gale Holland points out, many parents would gladly stay at their local elementary schools--which are often racially integrated and which parents have worked hard to support but are forced to abandon if their children are accepted to a magnet. Otherwise, they lose all points and are at a disadvantage when applying to middle-school magnets. The result: The neighborhood school suffers a constant attrition of families who are often among the most involved, and the local middle school loses the influx of families that might turn it around.
The solution is simple: Every child should start with a clean slate when applying to middle school. Getting into a desirable elementary magnet should be reward enough. These students should not get the additional reward of receiving priority when applying to middle-school magnets.
Ann Wexler
Los Angeles
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.