rt2dz
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Oct 26, 2004
- Messages
- 5,596
I know what you mean, our school's "director of first impressions" (since when is being a receptionist a bad thing!?!) is the most awful, rude, horrible person. If she worked for me, with how she treats people--parents, delivery people, students--I'd fire her. And I'm not the only one who thinks that way! Some people have no proffesionalism, maybe that is what a receptionist does have so that isn't the job title.
Our principal meets with parents when the request it--1100 students (this year, expected 1500 next year), grades k-4. You might not get your first choice of days and time, but it does happen in a fairly quick manner. And they, too give tours. Actually, the tour is given by one of the assistant principals or one of the counselors. They usually have a specific day that they do it so it isn't 100s of prospective students/families over time, but once or twice a month in larger groups. They will make individual appointments for those that can't make it then too.
Then at the beginning of the year there is a meet-n-greet night--two actually, they split the alphabet--for all K parents/families. Every school in our district does that. All 35 elementary schools have the K night, all intermidate schools do for grades 4, all middle schools for grades 6 and all high schools for grades 9. This way students get to see the school and parents can know who the key people are and everyone know individual policies. It's pretty much that way for all districts around here; nothing special about ours.
If you aren't married to the neighborhood, I'd look at other areas where the schools might be better. I'd hate to leave my child in the hands of people too caught up with the administration that they don't see the students. The school may be very understaffed if that is the way it has to be--red flag. I look at the schools before I look at the neighborhood just to make sure since I couldn't stomach bad schools for my kids.
Our principal meets with parents when the request it--1100 students (this year, expected 1500 next year), grades k-4. You might not get your first choice of days and time, but it does happen in a fairly quick manner. And they, too give tours. Actually, the tour is given by one of the assistant principals or one of the counselors. They usually have a specific day that they do it so it isn't 100s of prospective students/families over time, but once or twice a month in larger groups. They will make individual appointments for those that can't make it then too.
Then at the beginning of the year there is a meet-n-greet night--two actually, they split the alphabet--for all K parents/families. Every school in our district does that. All 35 elementary schools have the K night, all intermidate schools do for grades 4, all middle schools for grades 6 and all high schools for grades 9. This way students get to see the school and parents can know who the key people are and everyone know individual policies. It's pretty much that way for all districts around here; nothing special about ours.
If you aren't married to the neighborhood, I'd look at other areas where the schools might be better. I'd hate to leave my child in the hands of people too caught up with the administration that they don't see the students. The school may be very understaffed if that is the way it has to be--red flag. I look at the schools before I look at the neighborhood just to make sure since I couldn't stomach bad schools for my kids.