pcowlax wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 1:27 pm
That is fascinating! I have never heard anything like that. 2 public high schools in town and kids are not divided geographically but can choose which one they want to go to??? Do they end up recruiting within their own town for public middle school kids? Do the drama teachers for both high schools show up at middle school plays and try to slide some NIL money to the lead's parents? That is such a wild and bizarre set up. My mother's family is from Burlington so I am very familiar with the Cherry Hill area but did not know that.
That's exactly what happens, and the youth programs feed into it. If you want theater, you go to West because they really focus on it. East is stronger academically. It's easiest to see in sports - East is better at swimming; in fact it's one of the best swimming programs in the NJ. Not counting the COVID year where they didn't have a tournament, the girls program has been in the state finals every year since 2016, and won multiple state championships during that time (including this year). Boys is not quite at that level, but also multiple championships. So if you swim in the Cherry Hill area and are serious about it, you go to East. Likewise with West and football.
My oldest picked East for the lacrosse program as it's stronger...not great, but stronger, and definitely building. And the kids coming through the program largely will pick East if lacrosse is important to them. But not always (part of my answer below to FFG). But the girls lacrosse program at West is outstanding, and it stinks at East. It's kind of funny.
GaitsRightHand wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 1:57 pm
This is widely known as "school of choice." Popular in the midwest. If you're in an area that has a few different high schools in a close vicinity- you can choose whichever school you'd like to attend. As you can imagine, school of choice HS's typically have better sports because they have a wider pool to choose from.
Had a kid commute 25 mins (3 towns away) just to go to the high school I previously coached at.
States with school of choice public high schools:
Arizona, Florida, Michigan, Indiana, Ohio, Wisconsin, Louisiana, Colorado, Nevada and North Carolina.
I've really only been exposed to the education systems in Maryland (where I grew up) and NJ (where my kids are), so I had no idea this was broader than that! Thanks.
Farfromgeneva wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 2:23 pm
Thanks and somewhat familiar w Cherry Hill (underwrote the mall debt once ages ago-best Asset owned by a weak B mall operator)-nice area congrats! Do you like that structure for the overall community - setting aside self interest for your kids? Or does it create meaningful imbalance(s) in your view?
So it's a weird split. West has 1400 kids, East has 2100 kids. East is seen as much more academically rigorous, but honestly outside of South Jersey, people think they're both the same (my kids go to East fwiw). But it does create a lot of weird rivalries; kids you grow up with will go to the other school, and you all hang out together during the summer, so they want to beat the snot out of each other in sports so they can brag with each other.
It also bifurcates talent, so like the East lacrosse program has by and large a really good base with a strong FO kid and defense right now. Unfortunately the best attack talent went to West. So West can score but can't really stop anyone, and East has issues on offense. Kind of stinks.
If they all went to the same school it'd be a very very good SJ lacrosse program (it wouldn't be a NJ prep like Bosco or an MIAA team by any stretch but it'd be competitive with a lot of other teams from other public leagues).
It sort of splits the community, but in the end, it's not the biggest deal.