Published: Sep 29, 2009 03:30 PM
Modified: Sep 29, 2009 03:31 PM
The future of Wake County's year-round school program could be decided in the next week -- not by a panel of judges, but by voters.
Candidates who support neighborhood schools and criticize Wake's school diversity policy and annual round of student reassignments have also embraced voluntary attendance at year-round calendar schools as part of their campaign message. These candidates could back Wake away from its decision, legalized in May by the state Supreme Court, to send students to year-round schools without securing parents' permission.
The issue is even more heated in the District 7 race, where some of the most passionate debates about year-round schools have pitted parents against parents.
This two-candidate district race, featuring a supporter of the school board's year-round school assignments and an opponent, is a clear-cut reflection of that conflict.
"Parents want stability, calendar choices and consideration for the individual students," said Deborah Prickett, a candidate who coordinates character education programs for the state Department of Public Instruction
Prickett's call for voluntary year-round schools is one of the themes that critics hope will help them on Oct. 6. Four of the nine Wake school board seats will be on the ballot.
Opponents of current board policies need to win all four seats to gain a majority on the board.
Supporters of the current school board have defended sending students to year-round schools as a necessary step to deal with growth.
For year-round schools"They accommodate growth and make good economic sense," said Karen Simon, a year-round school supporter who is running against Prickett in District 7.
Covering northwest Raleigh, north Cary and Morrisville, District 7 has been represented by Patti Head for the past eight years. Head isn't running again and has not endorsed either candidate.
Before the conversions and the decision to open all new elementary and middle schools on a year-round calendar, most students attended year-round schools voluntarily by applying for a seat.
Since then, a majority of year-round students attend those schools because they're assigned to them.
Parents can apply for a child to leave a year-round school, but school district does not have to grant the request.
Prickett said she'd lobby to put some year-round schools, such as District 7's Leesville Road elementary and middle schools, back on a traditional calendar.
She points to the large numbers of empty seats at year-round schools as a sign that not all the schools need to remain on the calendar.
Simon said the additional capacity for the year-round schools will help when growth picks up again.
Prickett and Simon also find themselves on the opposite ends of the neighborhood schools debate and the diversity policy, which aims to bolster the overall academic performance of individual schools by limiting the percentage of low-income students at any one school.
'Diversity isn't working'Prickett argues that Wake's efforts to balance the percentage of low-income students at individual schools have failed. She says most of the state's 115 school districts have a higher graduation rate than Wake for low-income students."The diversity policy isn't working," Prickett said.Prickett argues that neighborhood schools will promote greater stability and improved academic achievement.
Simon says hereducation in public administration and business administration qualify her to be a financial watchdog of the school system.Simon defends the district's diversity policy as a factor in its academic success.