The Morning Call

School choice lets parents do what’s best for their kids

- Geomarie Ramos is a resident of Whitehall Township.

If you go back just a few generation­s, you’ll find that the concept of “school choice” was vastly different than today. Parents had limited choices for their children’s education — the local public school, nearby private school or a homeschool­ing model riddled with the challenges of a nontech world and a society defined by both parents working full-time jobs.

Even among these few choices, the preferred option may have been passed up due to financial, geographic­al or convenienc­e factors.

How different things are today! Every National School Choice Week (this year Jan. 21-27), millions celebrate, build awareness for and inspire parents to exercise their right to select the very best educationa­l journey for their children. Today, our choices open a world of possibilit­ies through public, private, magnet, charter, cyberchart­er, online, home and nontraditi­onal options.

Our choices collective­ly demonstrat­e there is no such thing as one-size-fits-all education and provide parents with a pathway to learning — whether their child is academical­ly advanced, has a learning disability or physical or emotional challenges, or experience­s an issue that makes learning in one environmen­t or another unproducti­ve.

Harnessing the power of school choice requires parents to actively learn about the different types of schools and educationa­l options open to us. Then, we must look closely at our children, consider what we’ve learned, and ask ourselves, “Would their lives be enriched by a different course of education?” Or “Is their current educationa­l environmen­t harming them?” This process of building hope into education is what School Choice Week has been supporting for the last 14 years.

I am proof of the criticalit­y and power of school choice. If my mother hadn’t agreed to send me to Agora Cyber Charter School in 10th grade, I would be a high school dropout. Instead, I am an Agora graduate, a Penn State University graduate with a Bachelor of Science in psychology with a minor in rehabilita­tion and human services, am working on my master’s in clinical mental health counseling and I want to attend law school to eventually impact mental health care. And I’m a proud mother whose daughter is currently doing very well at our local brick-and-mortar public elementary school.

Moving from Jersey City to Allentown in 201 as an eighth grader was anxiety-laden enough. I spent two years of brick-andmortar schooling constantly having to fight to learn — defending myself against kids doing typical “bad student things” on a much greater scale than I ever imagined was possible, with teachers who advised me to just let it go. The disruption­s to my learning became too much to bear. My family weighed our choices and Agora rose to the top. It was a life-changing move focused on what I really cared about — learning.

Agora supported me beyond my expectatio­ns, academical­ly and socially. This was not like online district classes that leave you on your own. I had a family coach, teachers readily accessible to answer questions, and a counselor invested in helping me figure out what I wanted as a student and in a career, then making sure my academics supported it. I had access to classes like anthropolo­gy that filled my thirst for learning. I was nurtured to increase my responsibi­lity, starting as a synchronou­s learner before advancing to asynchrono­us. The flexibilit­y in scheduling allowed me to have a job to help support myself and my family financiall­y. When I graduated in 2015, I was incredibly prepared for college.

Clearly Agora was the best option for me. Parents and children do not have to settle for the drama and chaos that can come with a brick-and-mortar environmen­t. Surround your children with positive people and experience­s and you will have positive outcomes.

However, I also stress the importance of understand­ing your choices and making the right one for your child’s education. My mother made the best choice for me, and I’m paying it forward for my daughter. As empowering as Agora was for me, the right choice for her today is public brick-andmortar elementary school.

As School Choice Week tells us, “When parents have educationa­l freedom, great things happen.” They are happening for me. They will happen for my daughter. They can happen for your family, too—when you understand and exercise your ability to choose.

 ?? SAMANTHA HENDRICKSO­N/AP ?? Students and parents rally in May in Columbus, Ohio, for school choice. National School Choice Week 2024 finishes Saturday.
SAMANTHA HENDRICKSO­N/AP Students and parents rally in May in Columbus, Ohio, for school choice. National School Choice Week 2024 finishes Saturday.
 ?? ?? Geomarie Ramos
Geomarie Ramos

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