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Getting the Best Education Possible PDF Print E-mail
exploringYour best sources for community learning are your local libraries, museums, zoos, nature parks and community centers. Explore these Community links in our Resource Guide to connect with learning opportunities in your neighborhood.
 Your Educational Choices
Seven Steps to Finding the Best Education for Your Child

From: Navigating School Options: How's a Parent to Choose?
  By Onnie Shekerjian and Mary Gifford
Used by permission

1. Embrace your role in your children's education.  Parents, not schools, are ultimately responsible for children's education.  When a child is educated outside the home, parents are technically delegating the responsibility to the school; they should never abdicate it.  Meaning, if a child's not doing well in a school, it is still the parent's duty to ensure their child's education needs are met either by working with the child's existing school or by choosing a different educational setting.  But a choice is only good if it is an informed choice.  Parents need to know their child, learn about the options available to them and then take actions to ensure that child receives the best education possible.
 
2. Document your findings.  As you work toward deciding how your children should be educated, write down your thoughts, observations and questions.   Create a file for each of your children; keep all gathered information in this file.  Use the collected information to make a final decision regarding your children's education.
 
3. Know your children's educational needs.  Understand each child's academic strengths and weaknesses. Ask past and present teachers to share their thoughts and opinions. Does your child do best in a highly structured or a more independent setting?  What do the report cards and standardized test scores reveal?  As a parent, what do your observations tell you? What are your child's interests? What are your child's thoughts on learning?

4. Establish your education priorities.  Decide what you feel is important for your child to experience at school.  For example, is it important that your child receive a strong character education?  Or, maybe it is important to you that your child be exposed to a strong back-to-basics type program.  Do you feel a religious program is vital to your child's education? How important is the use of computers at school or the role of extracurricular activities and the arts to you? How do you feel about schooling your child at home?  Since many education choices do not include transportation, ask yourself, “how far am I willing to transport my child?“
 
5. Learn the education landscape.  Keeping in mind your child's needs and your priorities, research the education options available to you on the Internet.  GreatSchools.Net is an excellent source of information regarding the charter public, traditional public and private schools in your area.   If you don't have internet access at home or work, visit your local library; many offer free public Internet access.  If private schools are on your list, don't forget to explore scholarship programs.  Create a list of potentially acceptable options.
 
6. Explore your targeted options.  Compose a list of criteria and questions based on your child's education needs and your priorities.  Make contact over the phone with the schools or programs you have targeted.  Does the organization welcome your questions and encourage you to visit their school or talk with other parents?  If not, this is a red flag and should be taken into consideration when the final decision is made.  Good educators appreciate interested and concerned parents and encourage them to become more knowledgeable about their children's education.   Make an appointment to visit with the principals of your top three to five schools; find out what information your state requires schools to report, such as drop out rate, qualifications of teachers, suspension rates, test scores, etc.  Ask the principals to share the information with you. What do the schools' Stanford 9s and their AIMS score look like? What does the data tell you?  See the campuses; observe the students interactions with each other and the teachers.  Could you see your child at one of these schools?
 
7. Make a decision.  Remember an old saying, “action without information is dangerous; information without action is futile.“  No one from any education system follows a child from preschool through college; parents are the only potential constant in a child's academic life.  The future depends on the decisions parents make and how active they are willing to be in the lives of their children in this new education marketplace.


The  resources in the link above are those that Learning is For Everyone, Inc. has evaluated and found to be of significant value or interest in the category of "Family Educational Choice." As always, use common sense and reason in evaluating these or any resources for yourself or your family, and cross reference any information to your satisfaction.  Additional links can be found in our Resource Guide, accessed from the menu bar at the left