I'm not familiar with the term "zero period", but I don't think having no lunch period is a good idea at all. This is high school. Why give them a schedule sure to lead to burn-out?I know all districts are different, but in ours, the top students would never take a free period - most take zero period, and skip lunch, to get the most classes in. Dd14 will take zero period this year, and from here on, and if she gets into a class she auditioned into, she will no longer have a lunch period.
A number of our top students DO choose to take a free period. Sometimes this is because they're taking three AP classes (it takes a pretty outstanding student to do more than three APs), sometimes it's because they're working/saving for college, sometimes it's because they're taking a community college course. But they do choose it.
We do the same thing, and it's been a good change. The val/sal may not be good speakers and may not WANT to speak. Any senior may apply to speak at graduation. They must write a speech and present it to a committee of teachers. The teachers have a rubric with which they grade the speeches, and -- in theory -- any graduate could end up being a speaker. In reality, the speakers are always students in perhaps the top 10%.Our val/sal do not speak at graduation. They speak at the academic awards banquet for the underclassmen, are listed in the program and are giving special recognition at the all-school academic awards program. The class speaker applies to speak and is chosen by committee--which is MUCH better because you get someone that is a good speaker that way. If the Val from DS18's class had to talk, everyone would have been asleep in 5 minutes. There are various sashes/medals/honor cords/tassels that the kids get to recognize their academic achievements and they are all listed in the program.
I understand where you're coming from. GPA is purely numbers. Honor societies have other requirements. For example, our school requires X number of service hours per semester. Some kids who have the grades aren't in honor society because they don't want to do the service hours. Also, kids can be kicked out for various things. For example, a student -- not even one of my students -- told me a lie that escalated (you know how these things go). I reported him to the advisor, had witnesses to the original lie, and he was put on probation from the honor society. Foolishly, he did something else, and he was kicked out. It's more than just grades.I'm the new National Honor Society moderator for my school for next year. I had a meeting with the outgoing moderator the other day and I'm just getting my feet wet at this point in the process.
As I understand it, the rules are:
- an average of 85.0 (84.9 does NOT round up!)
- a minimum of 2 school activities/sports
- in my school, it's fewer than 10 demerits. I'm not sure how that translates to other schools.
Our kids don't write an essay or do anything of the sort. Later in the summer I'll get a computer generated list of the kids who meet those three criteria; those are the kids who will be inducted into the NHS in the fall.
My point is that, as I understand it, it's very black and white. Either there was en error or your daughter didn't meet one of the criteria for admission.