3
0

Illegal Fees To Attend Public Schools


 invite response                
2012 Sep 18, 4:49am   43,140 views  136 comments

by Patrick   ➕follow (60)   💰tip   ignore  

I was a bit shocked when I went to re-register my daughter for another year at public school but the online registration would not let me enroll her until I agreed to pay for insurance for a mandatory school-issued iPad, or assume all liability for even accidental damage for it.

Since I was pretty sure that's illegal, I complained and was then allowed to register her without either paying or agreeing to accept all liability for it.

But now she's being singled out for public humiliation as the only student whose parents didn't just roll over and obey. They won't let her take the iPad home, and at the same time they require her to do homework on it. They're using her now to pressure me to agree to the illegal charge.

Not sure what else to do, I called the ACLU and was happy to hear that I'm not alone. These illegal fees have increased in recent years and caused considerable hardship for thousands families that can't pay. Often they are not even given required textbooks until they pay some illegal fee. I can pay, but the principle of the thing really bothers me. The school should obey the law, especially the state constitution.

So the ACLU has filed suit and it looks like they are going to win:

http://www.aclu-sc.org/doe/

Anticipating the win by the ACLU, the state legislature is trying to head off some kind of judgement against the state by enacting a law that provides mechanisms to enforce the state constitution's ban on fees for public schools, AB 1575. That bill is on the governor's desk right now

Not sure what to do in the immediate future though, since this is harming my daughter right now. Perhaps I could agree to the illegal liability for a week, maybe enough time for the governor to sign the law (if he is going to).

Or could I get an emergency injunction that would force the school to treat my daughter just like all the other students, and not discriminate because we are protesting illegal fees?

I can't figure out how to get an emergency injunction though. I looked at the San Mateo County court website for hours and got nowhere. Calling didn't help either. The people at the county court offices are not helpful.

Advice?

« First        Comments 97 - 136 of 136        Search these comments

97   Patrick   2012 Sep 19, 7:40am  

Here is the status page for AB 1575:

http://leginfo.ca.gov/pub/11-12/bill/asm/ab_1551-1600/ab_1575_bill_20120910_status.html

It's pretty cool. I assume they keep it updated all the time so that as soon as the governor signs it, everyone will know. Assuming he does sign it.

98   curious2   2012 Sep 19, 7:41am  


marcus says

I totally don't get what bothers you here. I understand exactly what you're saying. "It's the law."

So you don't get it, but you do get it?

Logic is not a strong suit for Marcus. For him, it's all about his own subjective feelings, regardless of facts and reason. That can be seen above, where he accused me of coming to this thread to troll him, when in fact I posted the first comment. (Perhaps he thinks I can read his mind and anticipate where he is going to comment, but really there are more interesting things to read.) At least he doesn't call you names, sometimes with profanity thrown in, and accuse you of trolling.

99   joshuatrio   2012 Sep 19, 7:52am  

Politicofact says

I propose a book, a pen and paper.

less than $5

iPad greater than $500

Ridiculous.

I don't want my children touching an iPad

I concur.

Seems like everyone's trying to go electronic EVERYTHING, which is really making life more difficult than it needs to be.

On a semi-parallel note, we just started homeschooling our 3 and 4 year old. Only been at it for a couple months and my 4 year old is already at the 1st grade level, when technically, he shouldn't be in kindergarten until next year (fall of 2013).

Total cost = $0.

We got a library card, a pad of paper and a pencil. The kids a sponge.

My 3 year old is right up there with him.

100   curious2   2012 Sep 19, 8:00am  

joshuatrio says

we just started homeschooling our 3 and 4 year old.

Many more parents are doing that, for many reasons:

http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/2012/01/29/why-urban-educated-parents-are-turning-to-diy-education.html

Some electronics can help too, e.g. free access to Khan Academy and YouTube. Even MIT and Berkeley are putting free courses online. The iPad can be very helpful for some kids, and there are many free education apps. I still support free public education though, because not all parents have the time or other resources for home schooling.

101   Auntiegrav   2012 Sep 19, 8:15am  


Richard Feynman has some amusing comments about the textbook selection process and how corrupt it is in his book "Surely You Must Be Joking Mr. Feynman!"

Always good to hear a reference to Feynman. ;-)
The other place to learn about the textbook crap game is in "Lies My Teacher Told Me"...it is especially critical of the history books and process. Paraphrasing, "When students take college courses, it is always better that they have some background in math, science, English, or any other subject: except History. With History, the less they have to be untaught, the better."

102   Patrick   2012 Sep 19, 8:18am  

I think the web is a wonderful resource for kids, especially things like the Wikipedia and Khan Academy. And I have seen some useful programs for teaching trigonometry and other things that benefit from animated diagrams.

But they're also ephemeral. They can change or just disappear at any time in the way a physical book cannot. And books don't need batteries. Books are superior technology that way.

103   Politicofact   2012 Sep 19, 8:19am  


Books are superior technology that way.

Throw that Ipad out

104   Auntiegrav   2012 Sep 19, 8:33am  

Nobody says

Hey buddy,

Get with the program. Only the rich deserves the education. Not you.

Now we did QE3, there are more money out there. We need to raise the price of goods and services to milk more money out of you.

Cute. Everyone needs some kind of education......schools, OTOH: they don't. Schools are only needed by the state and their most favored construction industries.

105   Auntiegrav   2012 Sep 19, 8:38am  

curious2 says

Electronic books may become cheaper and lighter and better than textbooks, which have been a very heavy and lucrative racket for years. Kids are weighed down by so many heavy books they need to put their backpacks over both shoulders or risk back trouble, while the Texas school boards distort education nationwide, and the publishers make $$$ from new editions.

Yup. Perhaps the 'test' for a new teacher is whether they can put together their own electronic textbook from Wikipedia, etc. in the 3 months of summer.
Open Source Textbooks 'R Us....
Oh...that wouldn't give the school board time to review it, so there might have to be some lag in there from year-to-year.
Personally, I think textbook selection should be up to the graduating classes, and a lot more teaching of underclassmen should be done by upperclassmen: starting around what is generally considered 3rd grade.

106   marcus   2012 Sep 19, 9:06am  


So you don't get it, but you do get it?

I can not relate to the way you feel about it, but I don't believe this has anything to do with my not understanding your reasoning.

107   Auntiegrav   2012 Sep 19, 9:14am  

Patrick: I wouldn't worry too much about your daughter being hurt by this. It will instead give her respect in the long run from the administrators, even if they try to make things harder. My daughter had a run-in over the shop teacher only inviting boys to sign up for shop class. It was one of many over the years leading up to her salutatorian graduation this year (missed valedictorian because of a technicality on credits and advanced placement classes). Schools and their administrators need to be taught that some kids are smarter and/or less docile than they are.

108   Patrick   2012 Sep 19, 9:48am  

marcus says

I can not relate to the way you feel about it, but I don't believe this has anything to do with my not understanding your reasoning.

OK sorry I wasn't as polite as I should have been. You don't have to feel the same way, but I do feel that the schools should obey really basic laws like the state constitution.

109   marcus   2012 Sep 19, 10:18am  


OK sorry I wasn't as polite as I should have been.

I didn't think you were impolite. Just sharing my point of view.

I actually find it kind of interesting, that is the degree to which I can't relate to it.

But I have heard some other things you say about education and unions, (not asking to go there) which I can't begin to relate to either (issues where I have an obvious bias). It seems like (and I could be wrong) that you have some issues with public education in general, possibly for some complex reasons.

110   Patrick   2012 Sep 19, 10:32am  

Not at all. I absolutely love public education!

I just have issues with being told I have to make some illegal payment, and with teachers' unions prevention of promotion or demotion based on merit, to the detriment of the students.

111   EBGuy   2012 Sep 19, 11:07am  

marcus, You've developed a bit of a siege mentality (which is reasonable, given some of the folks you do battle with on Pat.net). I too love public education and will be voting for Proposition 32.

112   marcus   2012 Sep 19, 11:07am  


with teachers' unions prevention of promotion or demotion based on merit, to the detriment of the students.

This is not a simple issue, but there sure is plenty of propaganda and over simplification about it out there.

In the countries that have the very best public schools, and also at the very best public schools in this country, they find ways to support teachers and help them get better, rather than focusing too much on tests and or a carrot and stick to "promotions."

This is an interesting Ted talk about motivation.

http://blog.ted.com/2009/08/24/the_surprising/

I think tying pay to test scores is bad for teachers and students.

By the way, I have issues with too much emphasis on seniority in determining who gets to teach what, but I don't have a problem with it being a factor. I don't have a problem with test score improvement being a factor in our evaluation. But tying it to money? This is a problem in that preparing for tests and learning critical thinking and problem solving skills are not one and the same. (I'm talking about Math - but this is even more of a problem in other subjects ).

113   Ceffer   2012 Sep 19, 11:20am  

I agree that teachers should not be judged by test scores. That is putting the cart before the horse of political correctness. It protects administrators by abusing the front line teachers and lets the s*** roll downhill.

To be totally politically incorrect, you can't make chicken salad out of chicken shit, comrades, and if students do not present either the aptitude or capability to learn, they should be routed into trades to leave the real learners and teachers to do what they do best.

If society wants to let the slow starters play catch up later by offering education to people who have become sorted out, then age twenty to forty is still plenty of time to get an education and have a career.

114   curious2   2012 Sep 19, 11:53am  

EBGuy says

marcus, You've developed a bit of a siege mentality (which is reasonable, given some of the folks you do battle with on Pat.net).

Marcus' tantrums including name-calling, profanity, and obviously false accusations aren't reasonable. If Marcus is actually a teacher, they are an argument for home schooling.

115   Patrick   2012 Sep 19, 12:27pm  

I also agree that test score or seniority should not be the sole factors in determining anything.

But the unions so far have been implacably opposed to all measures of teacher quality, all the time, with the result that bad teachers simply cannot ever be fired based on their bad performance, and good teachers cannot ever get promotions based on their good performance.

Thats just wrong, and the students stuffer for the unions pig-headedness.

116   marcus   2012 Sep 19, 12:57pm  


with the result that bad teachers simply cannot ever be fired based on their bad performance, and good teachers cannot ever get promotions based on their good performance.

Neither of these are totally true. Bad teachers are routinely pressured to either get better or their life is made difficult, and they can be fired.
But it does vary from school to school and district to district. Certainly the trend is toward it being way easier to fire teachers. Good teachers are rewarded in subtle ways for doing well, because the school wants them to stay.

You are too quick to buy the propaganda Patrick.

117   marcus   2012 Sep 19, 1:03pm  


the unions pig-headedness

This is really an ignorant attitude (no offense intended Patrick). The union is serving its function.

You see ads that say unions intentionally want to protect sexual molesters of children from being fired. Do you think this is true ?

I don't have time to go way in to this. But it's sort like blaming criminal defense attorneys for defending criminals, as if they are increasing crime by doing so. They are doing their job, because gosh darn it, sometimes the accused is innocent.

Do we need to have a system where innocent people who are falsely accused can get a fair trial ? Of course ! It's one of those yin yang things. IF you only consider the yang side, of course it appears unbalanced.

Believe me though. Any teacher who is known, or even highly suspected of that kind of thing is of course removed from the class room immediately. But yes, the union will go to bat for them a little, to give them a chance to at least defend them self, or make their case.

It needs to be neither too easy nor too hard to fire a teacher. At least that is the reasonable position of the union. But it's pretty easy to turn that around as someone here surely will, and to say that there should be absolutely no protection from being fired from a job teaching, and there should be very little job security to it. IF you are a teacher and have invested your life in the profession, at 58, and they can find a 28 year old that will do it for 15K less pay, and less benefits,...then hey, replace the guy.

Isn't that the American way ?

118   marcus   2012 Sep 19, 1:19pm  

You either have a union or you don't. You can pressure things to change, in terms of how easy it is to fire someone, or the way that we are evaluated (or even merit pay - whcih is a mistake - and I'm not saying that because I don't think I would benefit).

But you have a union or you don't. There isn't a lot of in between. And without the union, the quality of public school teachers goes down.

Do the Math.

But that's what they want.

Privatization. It may even have some advantages, in terms of how fast some changes can be made (this is only the near term).

But ultimately it's terrible. Profit to the top managers. And ultimately fuck the teachers and the students, at the schools that aren't the top tier most expensive schools.

119   suspiria_2   2012 Sep 19, 2:44pm  

further to your point, if they eventually do privatize then it will be in favor of a system that will basically force the less financially well-off parents to either do without entirely, or send their kids to the McDonald's of education.

then i'm sure some would like to pillory the parents yet again for 'buying only crap' education for their kids.

damned if you do, damned if you don't.

this comment vis-a-vis 'the duds, and how we should just force them into the trades' is foolish. i don't think true duds would do well in the trades. it takes skills, albeit of different and more hands-on variety to be a good tradesman, and the comment is very derogatorily class-based. it's pretty much very little use to say "for those who plan to go to college and become engineers, doctors etc. we can help you, but the rest should just give up and resign themselves to a life of ditch digging now because you are wasting everyone's time."

i'm personally in favor of the guild system and think it should be adopted vigorously and early, but it's very difficult to sell true apprenticeships nowadays. after asking a shoe-repair guy about it once, he said what i have since heard and read over and over: if i hire an apprentice, i'll have to pay him to stand around for a year and absorb stuff before he makes me any money. apprentices appear to not be economically feasible, and it seems impossible in the climate we have today to ask someone to increases someone else's future bottom line at cost to themselves.

120   marcus   2012 Sep 19, 2:55pm  

suspiria_2 says

it's pretty much very little use to say "for those who plan to go to college and become engineers, doctors etc. we can help you, but the rest should just give up and resign themselves to a life of ditch digging now because you are wasting everyone's time."

On the one hand you have a point, but on the other, there are countries such as Germany that seem to do this fairly well. YOu get tracked for higher education or not, but the not track includes a lot of valued training with various options. I think this makes sense, and the success of their economy bears that out.

Then again I would have reservations about tracking to an extreme degree at a young age. How does a child know what they want to do or will be able to do? Since so much has to do with drive and discipline, who knows how much of these attributes might be there a few years later (for a family that underestimates their child's potential - based on scores of a 12 year old).

Still this is interesting http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Education_in_Germany

121   david1   2012 Sep 20, 12:16am  

marcus says

Then again I would have reservations about tracking to an extreme degree at a young age. How does a child know what they want to do or will be able to do?

Coming from a guy who has consistently scored extremely high on standardized tests: (I have often wished there could be a job where I just took standardized tests all day - tutoring for the GMAT is not nearly lucrative enough)

This would be a huge mistake. I have no problem admiting that I have been outperformed occasionally by peers in both my educational and professional careers who I am quite sure would have scored lower than I on any standardized test.

To do this on a large scale would be a detriment to our collective growth.

We have already too much unrealized potential in poor or inner-city areas lost to the capitalist property tax-based system of public school funding.

122   Patrick   2012 Sep 21, 9:40am  

Without admitting they did anything wrong, the district is now going to allow my daughter to take home the iPad even without my buying insurance or taking on all liability for it. The state laws regarding willful damage to school property are sufficient for them.

So problem solved as far as my personal situation goes!

Now I just hope that AB 1575 gets passed so that other parents will have an easier time protesting illegal charges for public schools in the future.

Assemblyman Rich Gordon was a great help in this by simply calling the superintendent's office. I support Rich for re-election in November!

123   KILLERJANE   2012 Sep 21, 9:48am  

They are buying you off. But now they have to consider their fees, so you made an impact.

124   suspiria_2   2012 Sep 21, 11:11am  

just you wait 'til the other parents get the word.

watch-- half of them will be like the comment above about how you're so petty. the other half will bumrush the admin. office for their own refunds.

125   Patrick   2012 Sep 21, 12:25pm  

suspiria_2 says

about how you're so petty

Yeah, that pesky state constitutional guarantee of free public education.

Why would anyone be concerned about that?

126   curious2   2012 Sep 21, 1:17pm  

suspiria_2 says

half of them will be like the comment above about how you're so petty. the other half will bumrush the admin. office for their own refunds.

Most of them will wish they had done the same thing, but they probably don't have the time because they're busy working two jobs to pay the mortgage. Nuisance fees and rebate slippage both depend on people not having enough time. Few would seriously argue against contesting an illegal fee, just like nobody would argue against completing a rebate form after buying the product; most people recognize the legitimacy of it, they just don't have the time.

127   evilmonkeyboy   2012 Sep 21, 1:57pm  

Wow! It sounds like your daughters school district just opened up a can of worms. I can not imagine that giving high schoolers fragile iPads is a good idea. I would imagine that some of the parents that signed an agreement to assume liability will not be okay when their kids iPad is lost or stolen. To me it seems like if the school wants to require the iPad they should treat them like a text book. If you loose it, you get a student debt. Meaning that you can not participate in extra curricular activities until the debt is paid but you can still have your free education.

128   Patrick   2012 Oct 5, 4:59am  

Woohoo! Governor Brown signed AB 1575, reaffirming that public schools cannot charge mandatory fees, and creating a mechanism to complain about illegal fees without filing a lawsuit:

http://blogs.edweek.org/edweek/parentsandthepublic/2012/10/fees_for_public_schools_draw_suits_settlement.html

In this case, the government seems to be functioning properly.

129   Dan8267   2016 Mar 19, 8:00pm  

thunderlips11 says

Textbooks ain't that much cheaper than the tablets.

Textbooks are indeed much more expensive than tablets, mostly because of copyright laws and the publishing industry, but also it's far more expensive to produce dozens of textbooks than a single tablet.

The government should just pay a person $1 million to write the definitive textbook on a subject, and then give away the content to everyone. It would make the textbook cost less than a penny per print and still incentivize the best people in the world to write the best textbooks on any subject.

130   Dan8267   2016 Mar 19, 8:07pm  

rando says

Students could probably learn better from the Wikipedia than from lots of the textbooks I've seen and used.

Wikipedia The Internet

The last thing we need is students learning that Plato was an ancient Hawaiian weatherman and surfer taught by Barney the Purple Dinosaur. There are sooooo many better sources of real knowledge than Propogandapedia.

And I'm not the only one who says so.

131   zzyzzx   2016 Mar 19, 8:09pm  

I'm adding your story to my long list of reasons not to have kids.

132   GNL   2016 Mar 20, 9:07am  

This is purely big government and big business coming together. Electronic surveillance for future profit and tracking citizens. The proof to my statement is that they are making it a requirement.

133   B.A.C.A.H.   2016 Mar 20, 10:06am  

Partly behind this, is the break your landlord is getting on his property taxes.

134   Tenpoundbass   2016 Mar 20, 11:38am  

Patrick says

I called the ACLU

What in the hell for, they are the King making business now. You're not running for King Is You?

135   FortWayne   2016 Mar 20, 11:57am  

You should just talk to the director directly, this isn't right.

136   HydroCabron   2016 Mar 20, 1:28pm  

Why are we even talking about this? The far left is just as bad as the far right.

« First        Comments 97 - 136 of 136        Search these comments

Please register to comment:

api   best comments   contact   latest images   memes   one year ago   random   suggestions   gaiste