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How I Conquered ‘Kindergarten Panic' in the Era of School Choice

How I Conquered ‘Kindergarten Panic' in the Era of School Choice

When I was growing up in the Sacramento suburbs in the 1990s, kindergarten enrollment involved very little decision-making. My mother simply sent us to the elementary school closest to home.
Now as a parent in Los Angeles, I discovered that finding a kindergarten is anything but simple.
I report on education, yet the system of enrolling in this sprawling, metropolitan school district still overwhelmed me. For years, I'd heard chatter in my mom group about permits, lotteries, point systems, school ratings and the wisdom of buying a house zoned for a 'bad' school.
Finding the best fit for my son soon became a part-time job. I learned my experience is increasingly common.
Beyond sending their children to their zoned school, many parents can now apply to magnet programs, dual-immersion, gifted-and-talented tracks and publicly funded charter schools. Others opt to home-school or choose private school.
'Raising kids has always been work. But this idea of school choice adds a new layer of intensity,' says Bailey Brown, a Spelman College sociologist who spent years researching the complicated school-search process in New York City, the nation's largest school system.
Federal data shows that nationwide, 42% of parents have choice within public-school systems, with 17% of public-school students attending a chosen rather than assigned school.
In her new book, 'Kindergarten Panic,' Brown argues the school search is a burden that is being thrust upon parents—mostly mothers—whether they like it or not. While more options help parents find the best school, not everyone knows how to navigate the process, Brown found. Middle-income parents were more likely than low-income families to learn how to work the system and enroll children in higher-performing schools.
Brown's findings helped me make sense of my own search, which began more than a year before my son started kindergarten.
I live three blocks from a school that, like my home, dates back 100 years.
The initial tour disappointed me—the kindergarten play area offered little beyond hot asphalt and a few tricycles. I was concerned that enrollment had fallen below 250 for the eight grades the school serves. What if the school kept dwindling?
So I began to look around.
On tours of two nearby schools, parents filled the multipurpose rooms and queued on a wait list to get in. Both are sought-after locally and part of the school-choice system because of their gifted-and-talented programs. There was only one problem, we learned as we walked down halls filled with cheerful children and bright murals: So many kids within the boundaries now attended that no one else stood much of a chance.
That didn't stop the dozens of touring parents from seeking an edge. They asked variations of: So you let in two students from outside the neighborhood last year—what exactly did they do?
A Spanish-language dual-immersion program within walking distance gave me my first glimmer of hope. Two parents with children at the school helped lead the tour and gushed about their experience.
A grant meant the yard was being 'greened,' offering a break from the typical sea of asphalt. The Spanish program competed with a more well-established dual immersion down the street but had grown so popular it could no longer take everyone who applied.
I detoured from my neighborhood to visit a school I'd long pined for in the district next door, one with an Italian-language immersion program. Though I'm Italian-American on both sides, I have long struggled to master the language. Having my son learn it at such a young age sounded idyllic.
Our upbeat tour guide quickly walked us around the yard before launching into an hour-long slideshow on the pedagogy of dual-language immersion learning. As the minutes ticked by, I grew confused about why she was trying to sell us. The school is incredibly popular and we just wanted to know how to get in.
She finally got to that question on the last slide. The school did take applications from families outside the district, but our priority would fall to the bottom. Still, kids with some Italian knowledge got an edge, so I eagerly followed up to tell them my son had been taking weekend lessons for a few years.
A friend connected me to a mom whose daughter attends my zoned school. Sure, she said, the play yard only has tricycles, but her window overlooks it and she sees kids play happily all day. The teachers, she said, have worked there for years, and she loves walking to school and being part of the community. I appreciated the testimonial but remained unconvinced. With so many schools offering something unique, picking a standard neighborhood school felt like settling.
On a lark I toured a nearby Waldorf-inspired charter school. We saw kindergartners baking bread and middle-schoolers learning a dance that triggered bad flashbacks to square dancing as a child. In the 'handwork' room, parents cross-stitched while our guide explained that all students learn crafts. 'What if my son doesn't want to knit?' one mom asked. The guide replied: 'Everyone can make a bunny. There are many different ways to do it.' I stifled a laugh.
Each tour touted the school's distinction: a visual and performing-arts focus at one, a science and math bent at another. By the 10th tour, I had refined my questions. Do students get two recesses a day, or one? Do they take field trips? Is there after-school child care?
Months later, decision day arrived. Parents anxiously awaited notice.
In the neighboring district, emails went out at 5 p.m. My friends began texting their results. My son had been waitlisted for the Italian program. As I rapidly cycled through grief and contingency planning, I checked my email again. There, just hours after the initial email, was another message offering my son a spot. I was ecstatic.
Brown said she hopes her research helps school districts understand parents need more support in the search process. Tools like hotlines or simplified applications would help—as would making assigned schools more attractive.
In the vast Los Angeles Unified School District, families always have a seat at their neighborhood school but can also apply to 700 specialty programs. A district spokesman said that while navigating the options can feel complex, the district has tried to streamline the application and offer support such as regional fairs, targeted outreach and enrollment counselors.
In her work, Brown saw the 'panic' of the kindergarten search manifest in many ways, including in the pressure parents put on themselves to make the perfect choice. 'They thought it was a reflection,' she said, 'of who they were as a parent.'
Write to Sara Randazzo at sara.randazzo@wsj.com
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335-year-old inscription unveils Srikakulam's earliest name
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Berhampur: As Srikakulam district celebrates its 75th year of formation, history has gifted it a jewel from the past. The gift is the first known epigraphical evidence of its very name. In a remarkable discovery, an ancient Odia-language inscription, etched 335 years ago, reveals that the town was once proudly known as 'Sikakoli Gada' — the Fort of Srikakulam. The find was made by independent epigraphist Bishnu Mohan Adhikari of Paralakhemundi, whose meticulous scholarship has so far unlocked the secrets of nearly 200 inscriptions across Odisha, Andhra Pradesh, Chhattisgarh and Telangana. On August 10, while exploring the sacred precincts of Sri Uma Lakshmisvara Swami temple in Gujarathipeta, Bishnu examined the stone pillars of the temple's Brusabha Mandapa. He fully deciphered a 65-line inscription dating back to April 1690 CE, an era when dynasties rose and fell, yet faith stood firm. 'This discovery shows that the name 'Srikakulam' was already in use more than three centuries ago,' Bishnu said, affirming it as the earliest clear epigraphical record of the name. The inscription not only immortalises the town's ancient identity but also narrates a decisive moment in regional history. It records how Maharaja Pratapa Bishwambhara Deva of Suryavamshi Sankara dynasty of Nandapuram triumphed over the Muslim rulers of Chicacole, forging a historic accord with the Qutb Shahi authorities. Under this agreement, the revenues from three villages, Nandigram, Bontalakoduru and Narasannapeta mutha, along with donations of gold and cattle, were dedicated to Sri Uma Lakshmisvara Swami temple to sustain its ritual services. The beautifully composed verses conclude with Sanskrit shlokas, blending political history with spiritual devotion. Notably, the first 20 lines of this inscription had earlier found mention in the INTACH publication Relics of Kalinga in South India by Deepak Kumar Nayak, to which Bishnu contributed. This latest reading, which is a complete 65-line professional estampage, now firmly links modern Srikakulam to its proud Kalinga heritage. Local MLA Gondu Shankar hailed the discovery, assuring that the government would extend full support to such historical research. Bishnu, meanwhile, continued his journey through North Andhra's past, visiting Sri Kurmanatha temple to study its still-undeciphered inscriptions. Accompanying him in this heritage mission were Aravind Singh (popularly known as the 'Srikakulam Weather Man'), Jaggu Bai and Chakravarti Rao, who assisted in the painstaking process of preparing the estampage. Historians believe this revelation could reshape the historical narrative of North Andhra, reaffirming its deep-rooted ties to the ancient civilisation of Kalinga and rekindling pride in a name that has endured across centuries.

How I Conquered ‘Kindergarten Panic' in the Era of School Choice
How I Conquered ‘Kindergarten Panic' in the Era of School Choice

Hindustan Times

timea day ago

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How I Conquered ‘Kindergarten Panic' in the Era of School Choice

When I was growing up in the Sacramento suburbs in the 1990s, kindergarten enrollment involved very little decision-making. My mother simply sent us to the elementary school closest to home. Now as a parent in Los Angeles, I discovered that finding a kindergarten is anything but simple. I report on education, yet the system of enrolling in this sprawling, metropolitan school district still overwhelmed me. For years, I'd heard chatter in my mom group about permits, lotteries, point systems, school ratings and the wisdom of buying a house zoned for a 'bad' school. Finding the best fit for my son soon became a part-time job. I learned my experience is increasingly common. Beyond sending their children to their zoned school, many parents can now apply to magnet programs, dual-immersion, gifted-and-talented tracks and publicly funded charter schools. Others opt to home-school or choose private school. 'Raising kids has always been work. But this idea of school choice adds a new layer of intensity,' says Bailey Brown, a Spelman College sociologist who spent years researching the complicated school-search process in New York City, the nation's largest school system. Federal data shows that nationwide, 42% of parents have choice within public-school systems, with 17% of public-school students attending a chosen rather than assigned school. In her new book, 'Kindergarten Panic,' Brown argues the school search is a burden that is being thrust upon parents—mostly mothers—whether they like it or not. While more options help parents find the best school, not everyone knows how to navigate the process, Brown found. Middle-income parents were more likely than low-income families to learn how to work the system and enroll children in higher-performing schools. Brown's findings helped me make sense of my own search, which began more than a year before my son started kindergarten. I live three blocks from a school that, like my home, dates back 100 years. The initial tour disappointed me—the kindergarten play area offered little beyond hot asphalt and a few tricycles. I was concerned that enrollment had fallen below 250 for the eight grades the school serves. What if the school kept dwindling? So I began to look around. On tours of two nearby schools, parents filled the multipurpose rooms and queued on a wait list to get in. Both are sought-after locally and part of the school-choice system because of their gifted-and-talented programs. There was only one problem, we learned as we walked down halls filled with cheerful children and bright murals: So many kids within the boundaries now attended that no one else stood much of a chance. That didn't stop the dozens of touring parents from seeking an edge. They asked variations of: So you let in two students from outside the neighborhood last year—what exactly did they do? A Spanish-language dual-immersion program within walking distance gave me my first glimmer of hope. Two parents with children at the school helped lead the tour and gushed about their experience. A grant meant the yard was being 'greened,' offering a break from the typical sea of asphalt. The Spanish program competed with a more well-established dual immersion down the street but had grown so popular it could no longer take everyone who applied. I detoured from my neighborhood to visit a school I'd long pined for in the district next door, one with an Italian-language immersion program. Though I'm Italian-American on both sides, I have long struggled to master the language. Having my son learn it at such a young age sounded idyllic. Our upbeat tour guide quickly walked us around the yard before launching into an hour-long slideshow on the pedagogy of dual-language immersion learning. As the minutes ticked by, I grew confused about why she was trying to sell us. The school is incredibly popular and we just wanted to know how to get in. She finally got to that question on the last slide. The school did take applications from families outside the district, but our priority would fall to the bottom. Still, kids with some Italian knowledge got an edge, so I eagerly followed up to tell them my son had been taking weekend lessons for a few years. A friend connected me to a mom whose daughter attends my zoned school. Sure, she said, the play yard only has tricycles, but her window overlooks it and she sees kids play happily all day. The teachers, she said, have worked there for years, and she loves walking to school and being part of the community. I appreciated the testimonial but remained unconvinced. With so many schools offering something unique, picking a standard neighborhood school felt like settling. On a lark I toured a nearby Waldorf-inspired charter school. We saw kindergartners baking bread and middle-schoolers learning a dance that triggered bad flashbacks to square dancing as a child. In the 'handwork' room, parents cross-stitched while our guide explained that all students learn crafts. 'What if my son doesn't want to knit?' one mom asked. The guide replied: 'Everyone can make a bunny. There are many different ways to do it.' I stifled a laugh. Each tour touted the school's distinction: a visual and performing-arts focus at one, a science and math bent at another. By the 10th tour, I had refined my questions. Do students get two recesses a day, or one? Do they take field trips? Is there after-school child care? Months later, decision day arrived. Parents anxiously awaited notice. In the neighboring district, emails went out at 5 p.m. My friends began texting their results. My son had been waitlisted for the Italian program. As I rapidly cycled through grief and contingency planning, I checked my email again. There, just hours after the initial email, was another message offering my son a spot. I was ecstatic. Brown said she hopes her research helps school districts understand parents need more support in the search process. Tools like hotlines or simplified applications would help—as would making assigned schools more attractive. In the vast Los Angeles Unified School District, families always have a seat at their neighborhood school but can also apply to 700 specialty programs. A district spokesman said that while navigating the options can feel complex, the district has tried to streamline the application and offer support such as regional fairs, targeted outreach and enrollment counselors. In her work, Brown saw the 'panic' of the kindergarten search manifest in many ways, including in the pressure parents put on themselves to make the perfect choice. 'They thought it was a reflection,' she said, 'of who they were as a parent.' Write to Sara Randazzo at

Veteran epigraphist honoured with Tamil Wiki Thooran Award in Erode
Veteran epigraphist honoured with Tamil Wiki Thooran Award in Erode

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Veteran epigraphist honoured with Tamil Wiki Thooran Award in Erode

Renowned epigraphist and archaeologist V. Vedachalam (75) was honoured with the Tamil Wiki Periyasamy Thooran Award 2025 here on Saturday (August 16, 2025). At a function organised by the Vishnupuram Literary Circle at Kavundachipalayam on Chennimalai Road, he received the award, which carried a cash prize of ₹2 lakh and a sculpture. Instituted in 2022 in memory of Periyasamy Thooran, creator of the Tamil Encyclopedia, the award is presented to Tamil scholars who have made notable contributions to culture and literature. Accepting the award, Mr. Vedachalam said he had completed a 50-year journey in the field, including 33 years in the State Department of Archaeology. 'After my retirement, I wrote 10 books so that my experiences could be shared. With the support of my family and well-wishers, I travelled across the country to archaeological sites and visited 24 countries of historical significance. This award is a recognition of my contribution,' he said. Felicitating him, senior epigraphist Y. Subbarayalu credited Mr. Vedachalam as the driving force behind the Keezhadi excavations. Speaking about the site, he said that while exaggerated reports had often emerged, the excavation held undeniable significance. 'Any excavation must be carried out with patience, inch by inch, layer by layer, so that artefacts unearthed at different levels can be studied together to establish their antiquity,' he said. Archaeologist Vasant Shinde, in his felicitation, said Mr. Vedachalam's contributions must be widely recognised. Writer B. Jeyamohan said it was their dream to establish an English-language publishing house and bring out Tamil works in London, a project already in progress.

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