St. Petersburg Times
tampabay.com

Print storySubscribe to the Times

Profiles in Choice

Memories, values aid search for elementary

By JODY McMASTER, Times Staff Writer
Published August 29, 2004

Situation: Times copy editor Jody McMaster has a son at a fundamental school - a school they picked a year before the choice system began.
(This article originally appeared Sept. 14, 2003)

The pressure was on.

My son was going to start elementary school, and once we chose, that would be it for the full six years. Stability and all that. Sepia-toned memories of my childhood public neighborhood school, the wonderful teachers and lifetime friendships forged there, and my golfer-mother waiting at home every day didn't help.

Cue the violins. And thank God for cheap chardonnay.

The liberal side of me was raising a kid mostly on her own. The conservative alter ego wanted for my kid what I had as a kid. Choosing a great school would be a good first step, even without a skilled hunter-gatherer helping to pay the mortgage.

Because I didn't think we had true neighborhood schools in this county - you could live a stone's throw away and not necessarily get in - the next best thing, I thought, would be to move near whatever school my kindergartener landed in. So I began scouring both schools and their surroundings (staying open to diverse, even funky, areas).

I considered South Tampa schools, and one in Plant City that serves my mother's gated community. (She had been lobbying for me to move there, but I ultimately realized that a gated-manicured-shiny-happy-yuppie existence would remove all interesting remnants of my personality.) Insane home prices and congestion put a damper on South Tampa.

Private school was do-able if my son's dad and I cut out most of the things that make life worth living. We opted to enjoy life.

A charter school in North Tampa, with Cracker-style buildings set on several acres and a nature-based curriculum, appealed to me greatly, but the area - near horrendous congestion - did not. Ditto for some of the other high-rated North Tampa schools. North Tampa is so popular, it makes my head ache.

Also checked out Sarasota. In a nutshell: great schools, too-expensive homes.

Back to Pinellas and my main sources of information:

Internet (for size of school; FCAT grade, despite my vacillating feelings about that; and general income level. A word on that: Despite my desire to live in one big, harmonious society, truth is, learning tends to correlate with income, and income correlates with stability and education level of parents, and so forth. Racial makeup of a school, per se, did not matter to me. Still, judging a student body by its wallet is inherently elitist, and for that there was some guilt.)

Word of mouth

This newspaper's yearly School Search

I started in north county because of the schools' well-earned reputation for achievement. Funny how anti-establishment one can be until procreating.

On weekends, I got a feel for Dunedin, Safety Harbor, Ozona, Palm Harbor and Oldsmar. All had what seemed to be high-rated, true neighborhood schools, charming homes in my price range, and a sense of community. But any of those would mean a hellish commute to and from downtown St. Petersburg, where I earn our daily bread.

It came down to south Pinellas. After checking some statistics on a few area public schools, it came down to magnet or fundamental.

My son appeared to be drawn to science more than art. He was more Bay Point than Perkins (magnets), even though, like so many parents, the idea of artsy Perkins enchanted me. So we went to each of those schools and signed up for the school lottery.

The reputed structure at the fundamental schools turned me off, but the back-to-basics theme and parental involvement did not. So we signed up at Pasadena and Lakeview for a chance there.

He got in to Pasadena Fundamental. We moved close by, to dichotomous Gulfport. Although it has felt like boot camp at times - for him and me - I'm convinced that he will get an excellent education, learn discipline, have a truly diverse blend of friends, hone character and begin to thrive in this ultracompetitive world. If he's really lucky, he might even forge a couple of lifelong friendships.

[Last modified August 24, 2004, 19:48:29]

School Search

Charter Schools
  • Education outside of the mainstream

  • High Schools
  • Advancing a career while in high school
  • Nine campuses offer range of practical career training
  • Where variety rules

  • Homeschooling
  • Pinellas friendly to homeschooling

  • How Busing Works
  • District streamlines system of getting kids to school

  • How To Apply
  • Applying just a phone call away
  • Online school choice form not for all
  • Pay close attention to avoid choice plan's pitfalls
  • The system's two-chambered heart
  • Two crucial calls for magnets, fundamentals, academies

  • How To Search
  • Nothing beats being there

  • Important Dates
  • Save these dates
  • School visit calendar

  • Information
  • A parent's primer to size up schools
  • New to the district? Register your child
  • The long and short of controlled choice
  • Want to switch schools? Options are limited

  • Information Centers
  • For more information

  • Middle Schools
  • Have a plan early

  • Overview
  • Learning the ways of choice or chance
  • Your navigation kit for the choice maze
  • Application is a risky business
  • Choose a good start
  • Key lesson of choice: Choose or lose
  • Pulling in the students with special interests
  • Schools attempt to raise their profiles
  • Screening, tests open access to gifted programs

  • Private Schools
  • A private matter
  • Some parents swear by voucher program

  • Profiles in Choice
  • Check out who sets agenda for the school
  • Choice complicates a family decision
  • Choice? Not really - let's just call it luck
  • Common bond is a big factor in a good school fit
  • Finding the right fit
  • Lesson learned: See it for yourself
  • Memories, values aid search for elementary
  • Not much of a choice for new residents
  • Planning, luck could deliver the best school
  • Private to public, small to really big
  • Sometimes where you are is the place to be
  • Sometimes you have to go with your gut
  • To get top choice, you may have to gamble
  • When your spouse is your kids' teacher . . .

  • Profiles in choice 2004
  • Approach choice like 'intelligent consumer'

  • Rookie Mom
  • First-year decisions draw child's big picture

  • School Grades
  • Behind each school grade is a deeper explanation
  • Dual programs hold schools accountable
  • For full story, include raw test scores
  • Making sense of the scores
  • To some, FCAT means more than just a score

  • Special Needs
  • Centers focus on needs
  • Programs help kids who may otherwise give up

  • The Computer Lottery
  • On waiting list? Patience is the key
  • Application process only the beginning
  • Students, parents face maze of choices

  • Click here for statistical data on Pinellas County schools

    Back to Top

    © 2006 • All Rights Reserved • St. Petersburg Times
    490 First Avenue South • St. Petersburg, FL 33701 • 727-893-8111