Published
December 04, 2007
Written by Grace Chen
Article describing what magnet schools are and how they work.
Magnet schools - this article will help you better understand what they are and what their role may be in your family’s education. We’ll first introduce the concept of a Magnet school. Then we’ll go over in detail the function that Magnet schools have played originally and currently. After that we’ll share some basic facts about Magnet schools as well as go over pro and con positions regarding Magnet schools. Finally we’ll end the article by discussing whether a Magnet school is right for your family and how to get into a Magnet school. At the end of this article is a list of resources that was used to help write this article.
Magnet schools are different from private or parochial schools in that they remain part of the public school system. They differ from Charter schools in that they remain part of the public school system bureaucratically. Charter Schools have a different organizational model (i.e. they have a charter that releases them from the regular school administration). Magnet schools operate under the same public school administration (they don’t operate on their own).
Distinguishing them from other public schools, Magnet schools usually have alternative or otherwise compelling modes of instruction. For example, you might find a Montessori Magnet school. A school doesn’t have to be a Magnet school to be a Montessori School. There are also public schools that aren’t Magnet schools which still offer fine academic experiences. Magnet schools differ from other public schools in that they receive additional funding to enable them to spend more money on their students, supplies, teachers, programs, etc.
Original Purpose
Current Role of Magnet schools
Many Magnet schools still help increase diversity within the public school system and help families volunteer for desegregation. But over the last 20 years or so, some Magnet schools have taken on an a more competitive aspect in that they can only fill 10-20% of the students that apply to attend school on their campuses. The current role of Magnet schools, therefore, can often promote academic opportunity and excellence over their regular counterparts. Magnet schools often attract “gifted” students who score well in tests and receive good grades (about 1/3 of all Magnet schools use selection criteria to decide who they’ll invite to enroll for that year).
Magnet schools have three distinguishing characteristics:
What is a Magnet school?
A Magnet school is part of the public school system. Usually students are zoned into their schools based on location. Students mostly go to the school which they are closest to (this may not always be true since boundaries can seem arbitrary). With Magnet schools, the public school system has created schools that exist outside of zoned school boundaries. The point of them is that they usually have something special to offer over a regular school which makes attending them an attractive choice to many students, thereby increasing the diversity of the student population within them (in theory).
History of Magnet school
Magnet schools first came into being in the late 1960s and early 1970s as a tool to further academic desegregation. The school was intended to “attract” (get the magnet metaphor?) students from across different school zones. So they had to do two things. 1) open their enrollment geographically across traditional school zones and 2) provide an environment or experience that would attract students and families from other school zones (thereby families would volunteer to desegregate their children to the Magnet school).
The original purpose of a Magnet school was politically not to innovate in instructional approach solely but rather to create a school that would be so attractive, it would “attract” students to attend it rather than having to force students to bus to other schools to promote academic desegregation of students. The goal was to reduce racial segregation voluntarily.
- Distinctive curriculum or instructional approach
- Attract students from outside an assigned neighborhood attendance zone
- Have diversity as an explicit purpose
Magnets offer special curricula, such as math-science or performing arts programs, or special instructional approaches, such as academic achievement through application of Gardner's learning styles.
- Are you interested in a different curriculum or instructional approach than what your children would have with their zoned public school?
- Do you feel your children have needs that would be better met with a Magnet school then their zoned public school?
- How do you feel about sending your children to a school outside of your normal school zone? On that note, how well do you think your child will adjust to a new school?
- How do you feel about student diversity?
- How do you feel about student achievement?
- Place my child in a more racially or ethnically diverse student population?
- Place my child in a school where academic progress should surpass what he or she would do at their assigned school?
- Place my school in a school environment with a specific type of curriculum or teaching methodology?
- admissions criteria
- first-come, first-serve applications
- lotteries
- percentage set-asides for neighborhood residents
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