Lonedar wrote:
The problem is that school districts are somewhat in a bind. Previous years enrollment data is not necessarily any more useful as the numbers can have fairly large fluctuations. Besides, its not fraud if each of those students are eligible to be at the school and not currently enrolled at another one. It essentially sets the maximum number of students probable. What is a reliable way to determine how far to back off from the maximum number that won't underfund the students that actually stay?
However, the first day of school for Detroit public schools was September 8th, so by October 1 they should already have a pretty good idea of their enrollment, though given the
absolutely fubar start, I suppose it shouldn't be of any surprise that with a full summer of registration and 3 weeks into the school year, the schools are still clueless as to how many students they have.
But lets ask what I consider a pretty important question... where do all these "new" students they are luring to the school come from? I can see where the 1,000 students they "gained" with the $500,000 "I'm In" campaign could have been new students to the area, or students that might have gone to the charter or suburb schools. But this late in the game? The mostly increase will come from either students enrolled in other schools hoping to win a prize, or students that weren't registered in any school, and except for this chance to "win" something, won't be back. This "maximum number" is an artificial inflation of revenue, at the toon of $7,600 per student in tax payer money.
Of course, there is an outside chance that the increase in numbers are all legitimate students looking for an education... Is it appropriate for one of the worst school systems in the country to siphon students away from successful area schools with bribes, while not being able to provide the assumed promise of a meaningful education (except maybe caveat emptor)? Unfortunately, in this story there is no cricket to come save the puppet.