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Middle Schools

Have a plan early

With 31 schools, Pinellas parents have many options. But all may not be available to everyone.

By DONNA WINCHESTER, Times staff writer
Published August 29, 2004

photo
[Times photo: Bill Serne]
Sheila Devlin teaches an “intense reading” class to eighth-graders at Tyrone Middle School in St. Petersburg in January.

OVERVIEW: There are 31 schools in Pinellas County for middle school children. Twenty of them are choice attendance area schools, spread over three attendance areas. They are open to all children who live within the attendance area, as long as the school has room and is in compliance with a federal court order that mandates the ratio of black to nonblack students. Some choice attendance area schools for middle schoolers have special programs designed by the schools to make them attractive to parents. (Please see information about school attractors on Page .)

There are three ways to apply to choice attendance area schools, but not everyone can use each option. (Please see the procedures for applying to choice attendance area schools on Page .)

MAGNET SCHOOLS: Two of the choice attendance area schools - the Center for Advancement of the Sciences and Technology at Bay Point Middle School and the Center for the Arts and Communication Studies at John Hopkins Middle School, both in St. Petersburg - have countywide seats. Known as magnet schools, they offer a specialized area of study and are open to students across the county. Many of the available seats are filled during the magnet application period, but a percentage of the seats at each school are reserved for children who live in the attendance area.

Parents who live in Attendance Area A (please see map, Page ) can apply for a magnet seat or a choice attendance area seat or both. (These are just two ways of getting in; once admitted, the student is treated the same.)

Families who live outside Attendance Area A may apply only for the magnet seats.

Admission to most middle school magnet programs depends on achievement test scores and grade point averages. Children who gain seats in the countywide lottery must still meet school requirements before they can be admitted.

The only way parents may apply for magnet schools is by using an automated phone system. (Please see the procedure for applying to countywide programs on Page .)

FUNDAMENTAL SCHOOLS: There are two countywide fundamental schools for middle school children: Southside Fundamental in St. Petersburg and Coachman Fundamental in Clearwater. They stress discipline and parental involvement, and children may be asked to leave if they do not comply with fundamental school policy, or if their parents fail to attend regularly scheduled meetings.

The only way parents may apply for these fundamental schools is by using an automated phone system. (Please see the procedure for applying to countywide programs on Page .)

In addition to the countywide fundamental schools, Thurgood Marshall Fundamental Middle School in St. Petersburg serves children in Attendance Area A only. (Please see map, Page .) Parents may use a choice attendance area schools application to apply to Thurgood Marshall. (Please see the procedures for applying to choice attendance area schools on Page .)

GIFTED PROGRAMS: Several choice attendance area schools offer special programs for gifted middle school children. Beginning in the sixth grade, mathematically gifted students are eligible for the Mathematics Education for Gifted Secondary School Students, or MEGSSS, program. Gifted seventh- and eighth-graders are eligible for the Integrated Mathematics and Science with Technology, or IMAST, program.

Schools that offer MEGSSS and IMAST are Bay Point, Carwise, Kennedy, Meadowlawn, Pinellas Park, Safety Harbor, Seminole and Tarpon Springs middle schools. Azalea and Tyrone middle schools and Southside Fundamental offer IMAST only.

EXCEPTIONAL STUDENT EDUCATION: Middle school students with special needs are served in both self-contained classrooms and in classrooms where they learn along with general education students. Customer service representatives at the Family Education and Information Centers can tell parents about their options.

Additionally, five centers exist solely for middle school children with physical, mental and learning disabilities: Hamilton Disston Exceptional Student Education Center in Gulfport, Richard L. Sanders School in Pinellas Park and Calvin Hunsinger Exceptional Student Education Center in Clearwater serve emotionally disturbed students from kindergarten through Grade 12. Nina Harris Exceptional Student Education Center in Pinellas Park and Paul B. Stephens Exceptional Center in Clearwater serve mentally and physically disabled students from prekindergarten to age 22. Parents can learn more about these programs at www.pinellas.k12.fl.us/ESE/

DROPOUT PREVENTION: Two schools classified as intermediate schools offer dropout prevention programs for fifth- through eighth-graders. Students who are failing, have been retained or might be, have low test scores or grades or have been frequently absent from school can attend Clearwater Intermediate if they live north of Ulmerton Road or Lealman Intermediate if they live south of Ulmerton Road.

DISCIPLINARY SCHOOLS: Middle school students who commit "zero tolerance" offenses - primarily those concerning drugs, alcohol or weapons - are reassigned to North Ward Secondary School in St. Petersburg or Safety Harbor Secondary School in Safety Harbor for one semester or more.

[Last modified August 25, 2004, 10:40:37]

School Search

Charter Schools
  • Education outside of the mainstream

  • High Schools
  • Advancing a career while in high school
  • Nine campuses offer range of practical career training
  • Where variety rules

  • Homeschooling
  • Pinellas friendly to homeschooling

  • How Busing Works
  • District streamlines system of getting kids to school

  • How To Apply
  • Applying just a phone call away
  • Online school choice form not for all
  • Pay close attention to avoid choice plan's pitfalls
  • The system's two-chambered heart
  • Two crucial calls for magnets, fundamentals, academies

  • How To Search
  • Nothing beats being there

  • Important Dates
  • Save these dates
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  • Information
  • A parent's primer to size up schools
  • New to the district? Register your child
  • The long and short of controlled choice
  • Want to switch schools? Options are limited

  • Information Centers
  • For more information

  • Middle Schools
  • Have a plan early

  • Overview
  • Learning the ways of choice or chance
  • Your navigation kit for the choice maze
  • Application is a risky business
  • Choose a good start
  • Key lesson of choice: Choose or lose
  • Pulling in the students with special interests
  • Schools attempt to raise their profiles
  • Screening, tests open access to gifted programs

  • Private Schools
  • A private matter
  • Some parents swear by voucher program

  • Profiles in Choice
  • Check out who sets agenda for the school
  • Choice complicates a family decision
  • Choice? Not really - let's just call it luck
  • Common bond is a big factor in a good school fit
  • Finding the right fit
  • Lesson learned: See it for yourself
  • Memories, values aid search for elementary
  • Not much of a choice for new residents
  • Planning, luck could deliver the best school
  • Private to public, small to really big
  • Sometimes where you are is the place to be
  • Sometimes you have to go with your gut
  • To get top choice, you may have to gamble
  • When your spouse is your kids' teacher . . .

  • Profiles in choice 2004
  • Approach choice like 'intelligent consumer'

  • Rookie Mom
  • First-year decisions draw child's big picture

  • School Grades
  • Behind each school grade is a deeper explanation
  • Dual programs hold schools accountable
  • For full story, include raw test scores
  • Making sense of the scores
  • To some, FCAT means more than just a score

  • Special Needs
  • Centers focus on needs
  • Programs help kids who may otherwise give up

  • The Computer Lottery
  • On waiting list? Patience is the key
  • Application process only the beginning
  • Students, parents face maze of choices

  • Click here for statistical data on Pinellas County schools

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