Village Voice

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Finding a High School for an Immigrant Child is Tougher than you Think

He arrived from Haiti in August to join his sister Carla, his aunt, and his cousins in Brooklyn. His family's attempts to get him registered in a New York City public high school started back then and culminated during two weeks in September, in an odyssey through five public high schools, trying to find one that would accept him.

In Search of the Best Schools, Parents Schlep Their Bridge-and-Tunnel Kids All Over

by Neil deMause
Each weekday morning, the commute begins: Carfuls and trainloads of Brooklynites make their way across the river to Manhattan, fighting traffic on the Williamsburg Bridge and jam-packed L trains. The trip can take anywhere from 15 minutes to an hour; on arriving, they strip off their coats, say goodbye to their mommies and daddies, and settle in for another day of elementary school.

Your Own Personal Blackboard Jungle

Fresh from the frontlines, New York Teaching Fellows tell all
The subway ads promise inspiration, fulfillment, and the kind of career satisfaction rarely found in an office cube.

Class Dismissed

Lousy teachers or just political victims: there's got to be a better way to settle teacher disputes than New York's rubber rooms

by Mara Altman
Imagine that your boss wants you to sign a document accusing you of something you don't believe you did—a fireable offense like assaulting someone at work, for example—and your response is not only to refuse to sign, but to let loose a damning accusation that your boss was making up the allegation.