How to Enroll a Child in School in the USA — Step by Step

Enrolling a child in a public school in the USA: documents, school district, ESL classes, Catholic schools, Polish Saturday schools.

Introduction

The school system in the USA is state and district-based (school district), not centralized. Each district has its own enrollment rules, but the general steps are similar. Public education is free and open to all — regardless of immigration status (Plyler v. Doe 1982).

Age and Grades

  • Pre-K: 3-4 years (usually paid, some states free)
  • Kindergarten: 5 years (mandatory or not depending on the state)
  • Elementary: grades K-5 (5-11 years)
  • Middle School: grades 6-8 (11-14 years)
  • High School: grades 9-12 (14-18 years); mandatory until 16-18 years depending on the state

Step 1: Find Your School District

  • Enter your address on greatschools.org — it will show districts + schools
  • Each residential address = assigned public school
  • You can also choose a charter school (public, open enrollment) or a magnet school (specialized)

Step 2: Documents for Enrollment

  • Child's birth certificate — with apostille and sworn translation (if Polish)
  • Child's and parent's passport
  • Proof of address — lease, gas bill, or employer letter (usually 2 documents)
  • Vaccination card — required vaccinations vary by state; Polish cards are usually accepted after translation
  • Proof of previous school — Polish certificate with translation (for class assignment)
  • Tuberculin test (PPD) — required in some states

Step 3: Required Vaccinations (Typical)

  • DTaP (diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis)
  • MMR (measles, mumps, rubella)
  • Polio
  • Hepatitis B
  • Varicella (chickenpox)
  • HPV (sometimes optional)

If the child is missing any — the school will set a deadline for completion (usually 30-60 days).

Step 4: Submit the Application

  • Go to the school office or district enrollment office
  • Fill out forms (in English or sometimes bilingual)
  • You can request a translator — the school must provide one (federal law)
  • Usually, a decision is made on the spot — the child starts within 1-3 days

ESL — English as a Second Language

  • A child without English has the right to ESL classes (also called ELL/Bilingual)
  • Support 1-3 hours daily + reduction of assignments in other subjects
  • Some districts: full bilingual class (Polish + English, rare)
  • Most Polish children achieve proficiency in 2-3 years

Catholic / Polish Community Schools

  • St. Stanislaus Kostka School (Greenpoint) — pre-K to 8th grade, Polish community
  • Holy Cross School (Maspeth) — Polish roots
  • Sacred Heart Academy (Maspeth, girls' high school)
  • Tuition $5,000-$12,000/year; scholarships available

Polish Saturday Schools

  • Classes on Saturdays 8:00 AM-1:00 PM; Polish + history + geography
  • Tuition $800-$1,500/year
  • NYC: Sienkiewicz, Kopernik, Pułaski schools
  • Chicago: several schools (Jesuits, Niles, Park Ridge)
  • Allows the child to maintain Polish + friendships with compatriots

Special Education

  • A child with dyslexia, autism, ADHD has the right to an IEP (Individualized Education Program)
  • Free evaluation — ask the school in English or Polish
  • Support: speech therapy, OT, additional teacher
  • Federal law (IDEA) protects — the school cannot refuse

Free Programs

  • Free/Reduced Lunch — breakfast and lunch for 0 or 40 cents for low-income families
  • Title I — additional support in low-income schools
  • After-school programs — homework help, sports, arts (often free)
  • Summer school — free in many districts

What You Should Know

  • Immigration status DOES NOT affect the right to education
  • The school CANNOT ask about parents' legal status
  • Absences = legal issues (truancy laws); inform the school about illness
  • Meetings with teachers: parent-teacher conferences (usually twice a year)
  • Report card every quarter — check regularly

Common Mistakes

  • Lack of translation of the certificate — the child ends up in the wrong class
  • Not reporting ESL needs — the child suffers without support
  • Ignoring report cards — problems escalate
  • Not participating in parent-teacher conferences — the teacher doesn't know who you are
  • Choosing a school without checking rankings (GreatSchools, US News)

Official sources

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