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Choosing a High School? Two More Chances to Learn About Admissions

Seats are filled at a high school admissions information session in Queens.Hiten Samtani for SchoolBookSeats are filled at a high school admissions information session in Queens.
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July 20, 2012, 2:32 p.m.

The Department of Education is wrapping up a series of high school admission workshops this month. SchoolBook caught up with parents, students and Department of Education officials Thursday night at the Long Island City High School in Queens.

Parents clutched copies of the bulky public school directory, as well as handouts on school choice that were available in several languages, including Spanish, Bengali and Arabic. Bonnie Gross from the department’s student enrollment division presided over the meeting, while six people translated her words for parents who wore headsets.

Ms. Gross used sample application forms and receipts to demonstrate the application process and explained the differences among the various methods that schools used to consider applicants: audition, educational option, limited unscreened, screened, tested, unscreened and zoned.

She also emphasized the importance of “location, location, location” because of the challenges that long commutes pose for teenagers. She told parents that they knew their children best, but it was important to make a realistic choice.

“Even if Hop Stop says the school is only 20 minutes away, there’s no guarantee that your child will get the first bus, or the first train,” Ms. Gross said.

Barbara Pharboo and her son, Brandon Lorenzo, said they learned a lot from the meeting. “It was really great,” Ms. Pharboo said. “We’re actually considering some of the specialized high schools, and we now know that we need to speak to counselors first.”

A few dozen parents stayed for a question-and-answer session to ask a range of questions, some complicated and some straightforward.

“Does ethnicity have a role in the admissions process?” one parent asked.

“Absolutely, positively, no,” Ms. Gross replied.

The last two high school workshops this summer will focus on specialized high schools admissions. they will be held on Tuesday, July 24, at the Prospect Heights Campus in Brooklyn, and Thursday, July 26, at the Fiorello H. La Guardia High School of Music & Art and Performing Arts in Manhattan.

Zaria Witherspoon, from I.S. 231 in Queens, with her mother, Shannon, at a D.O.E. high school admissions workshop.

Hiten Samtani is a former SchoolBook intern and a freelance journalist based in New York City. Follow him on Twitter @hitsamty

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Rachel Leinweber July 26, 2012, 5:47 PM

This lovely online brochure was developed by NYC Public School Students ..... a great effort to try to put this awful process into words and images and ideas right from other students' mouths:
http://welcometocup.org/oldsc...

The process of 'CHOICE' as it has been discussed here in a variety of articles is one that boggles the best of minds here in NYC... and these 'workshops' led by NYC/DOE are yet another series of events that can leave struggling parents and students even more confused than ever.

So much to say on this matter, but the gist FOR PARENTS AND 8TH GRADE STUDENTS is this:

Try to READ through the high school books that each year are printed and made available through the schools and NYC/DOE. Tag the ones you THINK you may be eligible for and which you think seem interesting to you and your student.

Try to get to at least one of these confusing workshops, and to one of the HIGH SCHOOL FAIRS that have many of the schools represented at tables and many with principals and administrators available to talk with.

TRY to NOT be intimidated and ask questions; if language is an issue, try to bring someone with you who may be able to translate. Before you go, make a list of schools you MAY be interested in and remember: you need to start with at least 24 schools you THINK would be good... then you can whittle that list down in a series of steps.

REMEMBER: The Specialized Schools (Stuyvesant, etc), and the Arts Based Audition (Laguardia, Sinatra, Brooklyn School of the Arts,) and Portfolio and Test Schools (LAB, School of Future,NESTm, and many others) all have very specific dates and requirements. TAKE THE TIME to try to figure out if any of these schools are going to be part of your application.

ASK questions, and remember that the DOE has changed the way the HS process has been administered MANY times in the recent past; it is important to find out as much as you can BEFORE school starts in September.

Good luck to all ....

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