Yes. We have "school choice" so you apply to high school. If you are not accepted then you go to your neighborhood school. These are usually schools that have lost their accreditation and have horrible graduation rates (because they only get students who didn't get into another school). Some of them are OK, but the one we are zoned for has a 41% graduation rate and is completely taken over with gangs (my older daughter started there when we moved here - that's why she was homeschooled)
My daughter is on track to get into a selective enrollment school now, but they are done by "tier" (which is a euphemism for "politically drawn lines to make sure that white kids have the least chance of getting in, and to make sure that we don't actually have to let the best students in, just the ones we want") so she has to meet the highest level of requirements to get in. They're basically neighborhoods. To give some perspective on why I think they're political and not accurate, they're supposed to be divided by socioeconomic factors. Buuuut... I am in tier 4, the highest. Barack Obama's house is in tier 3. So, according to the tiers, my 2 bedroom apartment is in a higher socioeconomic status than his mansion. :rolleyes:
Admission is on a 900 point scale, and the lowest score accepted in our tier over the past 3 years is 894 (in other tiers it goes down to about 825). It's ridiculously complicated, but 300 points are for grades, 300 are for standardized testing, and 300 is for the selective enrollment exam, which you are invited to take if your points are high enough in the other 2 areas. One B costs you 25 points which will put you at 875.
Right now my daughter is sitting at 600/600 based on what she's done so far, but we've got the rest of 7th grade to go before she can sit for the selective enrollment exam.
If she doesn't get in, she can go into a lottery for a charter school, which is a chance I don't want to take. Her only other options are homeschool or private school.
So, all that was just to say... Yes. We have to "get in" to a public school. So, she got to stay home and do the assignment because mama ain't havin' no B's!
ETA
@crazzyeyesassypants I do totally hear you - and it suuuuuuucks that your baby is working so hard and still having tears. There's nothing worse than when your baby is suffering, whether it's emotional or physical. I hope it gets better for her!