WaGriz4life said:
Unbelievable that you think open enrollment is a good thing. Doesn't Missoula have the highest high school dropout rate in the state? So your theory that open enrollment is keeping kids in school is bogus. It teaches kids that if something gets hard, you can just quit and go to the other school. Billings has strict school districts but still allows some wiggle room for a kid to go to another public school, for example if your parent is a teacher or coach at another school. Open enrollment builds no sense of community or pride in your school.
I also imagine that the parents of Missoula have a strangle hold on the administrators so that if a coach is "too tough" on their kids it will quickly get resolved and it's back to hugs and orange slices. If two Missoula schools combined they would be the biggest high school in the state and they still wouldnt be competing for state titles. But they would finally be able to win a few games outside Missoula.
No Missoula does not have the highest drop out rate in the state. In fact Missoula is lower than the state average, and the drop out rate has been going down since the introduction of Graduation Matters.
By the way, Missoula's program is going statewide, so Graduation Matters, coming soon to a school district near you. And yes you are correct, there is less loyalty to your high school. Hopefully you will find out, as you get older, that there are few things less pathetic in an adult than high school loyalty. I guess I just don't believe he neighborhood you live in should determine what school you have to attend, that it is more important to find the best fit for the kid.
Open enrollment and kids changing schools is not why Missoula athletics suck - it might lead to one particular program being terrible, but not the whole city. As far as the life lesson that teaches, hopefully they will learn that if the place they work is terrible, go get a better job for example. Hopefully kids learn you don't have to accept the incompetence just because of where you live. Look for something better.
As far as the parents comment, it is interesting because I have long heard that the problem at Sentinel is parent interference. But what I can't figure out is which parents they are, and what the parents are doing to hamstring the administrators and coaches? It is not like there has been a lot of turnover at Sentinel until this year, and still I don't know that any of the coaches or administrators were forced out. I think if you look at the football coaching staff at Sentinel you will see 2 kinds of coaches - recently graduated UM players, and parents. My involvement with Sentinel athletics is to buy things from the athletes raising money and watching a few games, so maybe someone can give some examples of how the parents have hamstrung athletics?