1 / 43

Administering the Open Enrollment Application Process

Administering the Open Enrollment Application Process. I.Preparing for the Application PeriodII.Handling ApplicationsIII.Reasons for Denial

ashanti
Télécharger la présentation

Administering the Open Enrollment Application Process

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


    1. Administering the Open Enrollment Application Process Application Period: February 1-19, 2010 1

    2. Administering the Open Enrollment Application Process I. Preparing for the Application Period II. Handling Applications III. Reasons for Denial & Selection of Students IV. Approval and Denial Notices V. Appeals 2

    3. I. Preparing for the Application Period 3

    4. Internal Procedures Review and amend policies prior to the beginning of the application period. Be sure all necessary OPAL users are authorized and OPAL contact person is current. Establish internal procedures for providing information and accepting applications: Designate one place for receiving applications. Designate one person/office to respond to questions. 4

    5. On-Line Application Form Applying on-line is strongly encouraged. https://www2.dpi.state.wi.us/OpenEnrollApp School districts are requested to link to the DPI web site or directly to the on-line form. 5

    6. Paper Form (PI 9410) Paper form will be located on the web site. DPI will not print and mail forms to school districts. Download and print any forms you need. Must be physically received in nonresident district by 4:00 p.m. on February 19. Hand delivery is recommended. Not to resident district or DPI. Nonresident district should date & return copy to parent. 6

    7. Special Situations 7

    8. 4-year-old Kindergarten, Prekindergarten and Early Childhood Education May only open enroll if resident district: Has same type of program, and Child is eligible for resident district program. If either resident or nonresident district are considering 4-year-old kindergarten: Student may apply. Approval/denial should be based on status of program at time of decision. May reverse denial if program is later instituted. 8

    9. Requesting Early Admission Parents may request early admission. Nonresident district is not required to evaluate students for early admission. If not, deny due to age. If nonresident district is willing to evaluate: Approve but include letter that approval is contingent on being evaluated and found eligible. 5K: only nonresident district must evaluate 4K: both resident and nonresident district must evaluate; student must meet criteria in both districts. 9

    10. Early Childhood Education (Special Education) Same type of program is defined by the childs IEP. If child does not yet have an IEP: Nonresident district may approve. When IEP is developed: Nonresident district may consider availability and space. Resident district may consider undue financial burden. Student must be receiving services on or before the 3rd Friday in September. 10

    11. Anticipated Move Parents may apply in anticipation of a move: Does not need to live in resident district or in Wisconsin to apply. Must know the 2010-11 resident district: If unknown, may not be able to apply. May guess, but will not be able to attend if not living in resident district on the 3rd Friday in September. Must live in named resident district before beginning OE and at least through the 3rd Friday in September. 11

    12. Private School, Home-Based and Other Non-Enrolled Students May apply for open enrollment. Approve/deny same as resident students. Must enroll in resident district prior to attendance in nonresident district. It is not necessary to enroll in resident district prior to application. Once open enrolled, may not be simultaneously enrolled in private school or home-based program. 12

    13. Virtual Charter Schools (vcs) Applicants to VCS are strongly encouraged to apply on-line. Paper applications not prohibited, but student must then also submit a VCS supplement page. There is a statewide limit on the number of students who may attend VCS under open enrollment: 5,250 Current VCS students and siblings are exempt from limit. If limit is exceeded, DPI will establish and maintain wait list. 13

    14. II. Handling Applications 14

    15. Handling On-line applications Once submitted by parent, application may be immediately viewed in OPAL. Application may be printed as PDF. Two pages Recommend to download applications into Excel spreadsheet. 15

    16. Review On-line Applications On-line edits will catch many errors. Review as soon as possible. Is nonresident district correct? parent indicates virtual school when your district doesnt offer a virtual school. parent applies for 4K when you dont have 4K districts with similar names: De Pere and West De Pere Waukesha, Wausau, Wausaukee, Wauwatosa, etc. 16

    17. Is resident district correct? Districts with similar names: Washington-Caldwell or Washington School name rather than district name or vice versa. Hamilton High School in MPS or Hamilton School District Do not correct resident district without checking with the parent. May apply in anticipation of move; do not assume resident district is wrong based on address. 17

    18. Do age and grade make sense? On-line application will not allow applications for children who will not be 3 on or before September 1 or students who will be age 21 on or before September 1. Parent and student names are correct (if you know): Sometimes they are reversed. Use legal name, not nicknames. 18

    19. Parents may edit or delete applications after they are entered, so if you begin processing forms before the end of the application period, be aware that they may change. Must request DPI to make corrections of parent-entered applications. (Planned) OPAL will send email to both resident and nonresident districts if DPI amends an application after the end of the application period. 19

    20. Handling Paper Applications Entered into OPAL by nonresident district. Deadline: February 22 (end of day) Communication features of OPAL require that all applications be entered by the deadline. Nonresident district keep original paper application on file. Do not send copy to DPI. Not necessary to send copy to resident district unless requested. If appeal is filed, copy of paper application must be submitted with the record. 20

    21. Review Paper Applications Timeliness Right place nonresident district office. Complete & accurate: Minimum: name, birthdate, grade, address, nonresident district, resident district, signed. Resident district means the district in which the student will reside in the 2010-11 school year. 21

    22. Reapplications If submitted via paper (recommended), do not enter into OPAL. If parent submitted a reapplication via OPAL, print a copy and request DPI to delete. If parent submitted unnecessary reapplication, request DPI to delete. Request deletion via OPAL. 22

    23. Duplicate Applications & Too Many Applications Duplicates: Request DPI to delete Only true duplicates (same student, same resident & nonresident district) will be deleted. Too many applications: Excess applications should be withdrawn. Contact parents to notify of excess applications. 23

    24. Exchange Information 24

    25. Special Education & Expulsion Records Nonresident district should request for all applicants. Resident district must respond in 5 working days: No special education or expulsion records. Yes, special education records (send). Yes, expulsion records (send). Yes, pending disciplinary proceeding (send). 25

    26. Special Education Cost Estimate Nonresident district must provide special education cost estimate: On or before March 15 on form PI 2092. Only for special education/related services required in IEP. Basic OE amount plus only actual, additional student-specific special education costs. No averaged or prorated costs. 26

    27. III. Reasons for Denial & Selection of Students 27

    28. Ineligible Late application Age ineligible Resident district does not have same type of PK, 4K or ECE Too many applications May only apply to 3 nonresident school districts Contact parents to request they withdraw excess applications. 28

    29. Age Ineligible Too young Not 4 on/before September 1 for 4K May request early admission Not 5 on/before September 1 for 5K May request early admission Cannot attend on or before 3rd Friday in September for early childhood Too old Age 21 on or before the 1st day of school 29

    30. Nonresident District Regular education space not available. Special education or related services not available. Special education space not available. Referred for initial evaluation but not yet evaluated. Expelled in current or 2 preceding school years for certain conduct. Current expulsion 30

    31. Expulsion Expelled in current or preceding 2 years for: Threat or false threat to destroy school property by means of explosives. Conduct at school or under school supervision that endangered health, safety or property of others. Conduct not at school or not under school supervision that endangered health, safety or property of school authority, employee or school board member. Possessing a dangerous weapon. 31

    32. Resident District Cost of special education or related services is an undue financial burden: In light of districts total economic circumstances, including revenue limit, ability to pay and per pupil special education cost of students continuing to be educated in district. Must be based on actual, additional, student-specific cost for nonresident district to provide special education and related services. 32

    33. IV. Approval and Denial Notices 33

    34. Notices of Approval & Denial Nonresident district: Must notify of either approval or denial. Form PI 9416 May prepare in OPAL. Resident district: Must notify of denial. Form PI 9417. May prepare in OPAL. 34

    35. Denials must be postmarked on or before April 9, 2010. Certified mail not required. Deliver to post office. Do not use district postal meter/need postmark. Prepare affidavit of mailing. Notice of denial must include: Written reason for denial. Students place on waiting list, if applicable. Notice of right to appeal 35 Notices of Denial

    36. Nonresident District Notice of School Assignment Notify approved applicants of: School assignment. First day of school. On or before May 14, 2010. PI 9410 may prepare in OPAL. Requested school not guaranteed. 36

    37. Intent to Attend Parent must notify of intent to attend: On or before June 11, 2010, or Within 10 days of receiving notice of approval from waiting list. If notice not provided, student may not be able to open enroll: If on waiting list, district may go to next name. If on statewide virtual charter school waiting list, DPI must go to next name. 37

    38. Notice to Resident District By June 30, nonresident district must notify resident district of the names of students who plan to attend the nonresident district in the following school year: Report in OPAL 38

    39. V. Appeals 39

    40. Appeals Parent may file an appeal within 30 days: Of date postmarked or delivered to parent, whichever is sooner. Must allege decision was arbitrary or unreasonable as it relates to the reason for denial. Department must affirm school boards decision unless decision was arbitrary or unreasonable. Departments decision may be appealed to circuit court. 40

    41. Appeal Procedure Parent files appeal. DPI reviews and, if accepted, sends letter to parent and school district: Requests record of school board decision. Establishes briefing schedule. Copies of all submissions to DPI must also be sent to other party. DPI will issue order after record is received and each party has had opportunity to file original and reply brief. 41

    42. Record of School Board Decision Copy of application and notice of denial. School board policy. Administrative procedures. School board minutes or notes of other meetings. Data used to make decision. Information on number of applications, approvals and denials, and procedures for selecting students. 42

    43. Filing A Brief Recommended Statement of Facts Application of Law Explanation of Decision Do not assume DPI will understand data without explanation. Argument 43

    44. Information and Resources 44

More Related