laprepfb
All-District 1st Team
Posts: 227
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Post by laprepfb on Jan 9, 2018 19:26:22 GMT -6
If I’m reading this proposal right, principals will have the opportunity to put their money where their mouth is with regard to what many of us have long argued about.
14.3.2 For playoff competition, schools that are classified as non-select but have registered a student or students through the online registration system as “not” living in school’s athletic attendance zone shall compete in the select playoff bracket.
If this passes (which I don’t think it will but it should), then there won’t be very many schools in the non-select brackets.
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Post by chalmetteowl on Jan 9, 2018 20:31:22 GMT -6
this
all it takes is one stud to skew a fair competition...
but realistically if this passes, no one will go to select over this rule anyways
no school is going to willingly let another register kids who live in their zone
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Post by bigred on Jan 26, 2018 4:20:10 GMT -6
Its not up to schools, the parish(s) make that decision.
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Post by chalmetteowl on Jan 29, 2018 23:41:37 GMT -6
Its not up to schools, the parish(s) make that decision. what i'm referring to, they already have rules against. if you're a public school you already can't have kids from another's zone where the issues are with parishwide open enrollment are Orleans and Rapides, and there, all attendance zones are the whole parish. the LHSAA can't draw maps
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Post by btown on Jan 30, 2018 9:55:23 GMT -6
Its not up to schools, the parish(s) make that decision. what i'm referring to, they already have rules against. if you're a public school you already can't have kids from another's zone where the issues are with parishwide open enrollment are Orleans and Rapides, and there, all attendance zones are the whole parish. the LHSAA can't draw maps That is the issue, every parishes school board has their rules and LHSAA has their rules. Parish wide open enrollment, two parishes that have rules for parents that live on parish lines and it goes just keeps going. When you get down to it the school boards for the differents parishes cause the problem.
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Post by khsyellowjackets94 on Feb 3, 2018 15:05:06 GMT -6
Public schools CAN have kids from out of zone. Kids can attend schools out of zone if the school their zoned for doesn't offer their sport of choice. The kid is allowed to attend the closest school that does offer that sport even if its in another parish. Kids can transfer to a school out of zone and sit out a year and be eligible the rest of their high school career. Also if the kid transfers before their 7th grade year then they don't have to sit out any of their high school career. Speaking on the Select/Non-select issue, what makes a public school non- select is having an open enrollment policy that has NO restrictions on admission or retention. No tuition, no testing requirements, no GPA requirements for retention, or limited seating. Madison Prep and Scottlandville are good examples of the difference. Their similar public schools except that Scottlandville has those requirements for admission and retention for certain programs which constitutes at least 25% of their enrollment and Madison Prep has no such requirements for any of their programs.
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Post by indy on Feb 19, 2018 7:32:05 GMT -6
Public schools CAN have kids from out of zone. Kids can attend schools out of zone if the school their zoned for doesn't offer their sport of choice. The kid is allowed to attend the closest school that does offer that sport even if its in another parish. Kids can transfer to a school out of zone and sit out a year and be eligible the rest of their high school career. Also if the kid transfers before their 7th grade year then they don't have to sit out any of their high school career. Speaking on the Select/Non-select issue, what makes a public school non- select is having an open enrollment policy that has NO restrictions on admission or retention. No tuition, no testing requirements, no GPA requirements for retention, or limited seating. Madison Prep and Scottlandville are good examples of the difference. Their similar public schools except that Scottlandville has those requirements for admission and retention for certain programs which constitutes at least 25% of their enrollment and Madison Prep has no such requirements for any of their programs. Acadia Parish has open enrollment. Parents choose where they want to attend and as long as they have transportation and behave they are welcomed. Church Point probably has 10% of their enrollment from st Landry Parish. Acadia obviously isn’t the only parish that turned a blind eye to school zones. This is why the lame, self serving s came up the the 25% rule.
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Post by khsyellowjackets94 on Feb 19, 2018 9:17:17 GMT -6
Public schools CAN have kids from out of zone. Kids can attend schools out of zone if the school their zoned for doesn't offer their sport of choice. The kid is allowed to attend the closest school that does offer that sport even if its in another parish. Kids can transfer to a school out of zone and sit out a year and be eligible the rest of their high school career. Also if the kid transfers before their 7th grade year then they don't have to sit out any of their high school career. Speaking on the Select/Non-select issue, what makes a public school non- select is having an open enrollment policy that has NO restrictions on admission or retention. No tuition, no testing requirements, no GPA requirements for retention, or limited seating. Madison Prep and Scottlandville are good examples of the difference. Their similar public schools except that Scottlandville has those requirements for admission and retention for certain programs which constitutes at least 25% of their enrollment and Madison Prep has no such requirements for any of their programs. Acadia Parish has open enrollment. Parents choose where they want to attend and as long as they have transportation and behave they are welcomed. Church Point probably has 10% of their enrollment from st Landry Parish. Acadia obviously isn’t the only parish that turned a blind eye to school zones. This is why the lame, self serving s came up the the 25% rule. 25% doesn't apply to any traditional public schools. It doesn't even apply to traditional private schools like Notre Dame. Only Dual Curriculum schools. And Parishes set school zones not LHSAA.
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