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November 4, 2008

Meet a 'Mother on Fire' for public school

Greg Toppo:

Last June, when Los Angeles performance artist and public radio commentator Sandra Tsing Loh helped lead a rally to the California Capitol for more school funding, perhaps no one was more surprised than Loh herself. Her transformation from popular author and comic to public schools activist began four years earlier, when her plans to get her older daughter into a good kindergarten went awry. She eventually started an organization called Burning Moms. Loh recounts the journey in Mother on Fire (Crown, $23). She talks with USA TODAY about her experience.

Q: It's 2004. You, your musician husband and your two daughters live in Van Nuys. Your 4-year-old is in preschool and you begin searching for a kindergarten. What happens next?

A: We're a middle-class family, which feels like we're the last middle-class family in Los Angeles -- the last one had packed up the Volvo wagon and gone to Portland a year earlier. When kids hit school age, people just start fleeing the city unexplained. So I didn't have much real information. ... I'd go on www.greatschools.net, look at the statistics, freak out and not even visit my local school, which is what many parents do.

Q: You began looking into private schools, but many had "nosebleed tuition."
A: I found that the religious ones were more affordable -- the more religious, the more affordable. Catholics were more expensive, Lutherans middle and Baptists were the only ones we could afford. The Quakers were off the charts, particularly if there's the word "Friends" in the title -- or if the kids were being taught in an old Quaker wooden schoolhouse with authentic Shaker furniture.

Much more on Sandra Tsing Loh here.

Posted by Jim Zellmer at November 4, 2008 5:11 AM
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