St. Petersburg Times
Online:School Search 2002
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Kids with disabilities may opt for vouchers

The students can use state-paid McKay Scholarships to attend private school.

By JON WILSON, Times Staff Writer
© St. Petersburg Times
published September 15, 2002


Parents of children with physical, emotional or learning disabilities have an alternative to public schools: the state-paid voucher program to enroll their youngsters in private schools.

To be eligible, the prospective student must have been enrolled and have been present in a Florida public school in grades 1 through 12 during the October 2001 and February 2002 FTE surveys.

The student must have an Individual Education Plan (called an IEP), and parents must notify the Pinellas County school system that they intend to participate in the voucher program. IEPs are given to all public school, special-education pupils.

Called formally the John M. McKay Scholarships Program for Students with Disabilities, the vouchers remain a hot political topic because they require using public money to send pupils to private schools.

But about 4,000 Florida parents appreciate the program because it has given them more control over their child's education. Hundreds of parents participate in Pinellas.

But parents must do plenty of homework to be sure they are choosing the best school situation. They must make sure the school meets the child's needs. The Pinellas County school system isn't involved. Each child's educational plan is between the parents and the individual private school.

Parents also are responsible for providing their child's transportation to the private school.

In Pinellas, 31 private schools participate, although two still await final approval. A list is available at www.opportunityschools.org.

The Web site includes other information about the program.

School Search 2003
  • Private school listing
  • Dressing up schools to attract parents' tastes
  • Bus service a first for fundamental schools
  • Controlled choice: question and answers
  • One zone, many choices
  • Middle schools tout themes to attract students
  • Special interests, needs met at charter schools
  • Education centers guide students toward vocations
  • Some parents handle the teaching
  • Magnet schools offer specialized education
  • 'Choice' schools are big part of new landscape
  • MEGSSS students to get more choice
  • 4 partnership schools offer another choice
  • Busing not expected to change much
  • Kids with disabilities may opt for vouchers
  • 'Career academies' target vocations
  • Not all waiting lists work the same
  • Elementary parents get more to choose from
  • How are schools graded?
  • Save these dates
  • Different programs are heart of choice
  • Preferences add further intricacies to application
  • Another choice option: private school
  • Requests for special attendance permits are expected to plunge
  • Administrators analyze special education locations, needs
  • Preparation can make shopping for school a cinch
  • Understanding the chart
  • This year, you must choose
  • Here's how to get started
  • For one mother, it's location, location
  • Choice plan presents challenges for parents
  • Current students have edge in choice plan
  • After Dec. 13, choices narrow
  • Choice adds confusion to newness
  • Each decision is a piece of data
  • A magnet application's journey
  • Computer program to help schools reduce crowding
  • If not Clearwater, then maybe it'll be Palm Harbor, or even Largo
  • After studying options, family waits for lottery
  • The calm before the storm
  • More to decision than A, B, C, D, F
  • Considering schools in the works? Look to principals
  • 3 new south Pinellas schools to feature special programs
  • Frustration mounts over need to choose at all
  • Didn't get first choice? Other options await
  • Choosing right school means investing time
  • Next step: finding out if you made right choice
  • Special-needs students await word on programs
  • Public schools may offer family more
  • Student sets sights on military
  • Family finds flexibility in homeschooling
  • Elementary schools list
  • Middle Schools list
  • High schools list
  • Bus service a first for fundamental schools
  • A straight answer is their top choice
  • A parent's painful choice
  • Seeking a 'friendly feeling'

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