Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

More families embracing school choice

- By Lois K. Solomon Staff writer SCHOOLS, 2B

Public schools may be starting to achieve a long-desired goal: They are luring back students from private and charter schools.

The numbers are still small, and officials say it’s too soon to call it a trend.

But parents seem to be embracing a new state lawthat allows them to choose any public school for their child, as long as it has room.

• Broward schools received 11,602 applicatio­ns from students interested in reassignme­nt to one of 170 schools that had space, up from 8,409 the previous year, a 38 percent increase, even though school district enrollment remained about the same as the previous year.

Applicatio­ns from charter school students increased to 3,485, up from3,088.

The rest of the applicatio­ns include those from students already in the public school system or from private schools, or from students who’ve recently moved into the county.

• In its first lottery under the new law, Palm Beach County schools received 4,505 applicatio­ns. About 500 of these came from private and charter school students.

“We are seeing a significan­t jump in people wanting to come back into the school district,” said Patrick Sipple, Broward’s director of demographi­cs and student assignment­s. “It may be too early to call it a trend. But there has been more interest because of the new law.”

Public schools have faced competitio­n from charters in recent years and lose money when students make the switch.

The rise of charter schools, which are publicly funded but privately run, has pressed public schools to market their strengths and get creative as they try to lure students into a growing assortment of programs targeted to their interests.

Parents have been able to choose schools in Florida for several decades through an assortment of magnet and choice programs in their counties, and Broward schools allowed students to apply to any school even before the lawwas passed.

For many of these programs, students had to be admitted through a lottery or pass an audition.

As part of the new law, schools must admit students if they have room no matter which county they come from.

In Broward, applicatio­ns multiplied in every school choice category.

Broward magnet school applicatio­ns, for programs such as science and technology, performing arts and entreprene­urship, grew from 11,209 in 2015-16 to 12,190 last year. And applicatio­ns to the Nova schools, four highly rated schools that have no boundaries, increased to 10,419, up from9,587.

"We are interested in allowing families to stay in the public school system,” said Leslie Brown, the district’s chief portfolio services officer. “We’re offering a lot of opportunit­ies that are not one-size-fitsall.”

InPalmBeac­hCounty, most applicants to the 79 schools that had space got their first-choice school, said Pete Licata, director of choice and career options.

Lucia Segal, of Delray Beach, decided to move her two daughters from the private Unity School to a public magnet school, Bak Middle School of the Arts in West Palm Beach.

The girls were accepted to the theater and visual arts programs after they applied and auditioned.

Segal said she had rejected public schools years ago as “really bad” and chose Unity for its convenienc­e and excellent teachers.

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