Yes. As a student you are not considered a local resident of the town your school is in unless it is one that you have lived in for consecutive years before. In many rural towns students must travel to other towns (sometimes hours away) if no schools are located in their area.
You need to contact your local school district. You need to have your answers ready in case they ask you why. I know of one child who was granted permission because he wanted to continue taking Latin. Such decisions are usually made on a local basis.
If you go to a public school, you will have to go to a school in your own city. Of course, it is also possible to move to a different city, if it is sufficinetly important to go to the school in that city. And if you go to a private school, you can go to any school you like, if the tuition is paid (actually some have religious requiremens as well, but religion can always be faked, if necessary).
This depends entirely upon the city and state where you live, and in no small part the district. In Michigan, generally speaking, you can attend schools of choice. That is, if you live in Grand Rapids proper, you are in the Grand Rapids Public School System. But, if you apply for school of choice at Wyoming Public Schools, or Comstock Park Public Schools and are accepted, you may attend there if GRPS releases you. However, at any time, you could transfer to any of the charter schools within the Grand Rapids Metropolitan area without being released by GRPS and several of those schools are within the municipal boundaries of Grand Rapids.
As I understand it, if you live in New Orleans, Louisiana, an all charter school city, you can attend whichever school you choose. There are cities across the US where you can also do this, and your parents will receive a voucher from the state board of education to pay your per pupil cost for that school.
For anything more specific to your situation, you'll have to research your district, city, and state education laws and regulations.
yes, if you are rich and can afford transportation expenses.
yes.but if they have citizenship of that country or otherwise they must have permission from the government of that country
No
yes
Yes you just need permission from the district
Usually it is. It's an attempt to defraud the school system.
this is considered a felony because they are paying for only the students that live in the district and you will be asked to go to court
Yes if the student can get a release from the residing district and approval from the receiving district. The student may also have to pay tuition to the receiving district. Another way is for the student to own property in the receiving district in his or her name.
Their primary residence address determines their school district.
Yes he can attend the school of other district. for that he have to take admission in the desire college he want
No. The School District of Philadelphia does not have a residency requirement. There used to be one, but it was eliminated about seven years ago.
You may be able to change, but it is up to the school district. Call them or go to their offices and fill out the forms.
Your legal guardians are responsible for your education. They can enroll you in a private school, provide you with a tutor, home school you, or insist that you change school districts without giving any cause. The school district itself has the option of rejecting your transfer if you do not live within their boundaries. Schools rarely reject transfer applications unless they are already at capacity. My own parents had me transferred from one school to another when I was in the sixth grade. I had both my daughters transferred from one school district to another, twice while they were growing up. All we told the school district was that it was more convenient for us.
One per school district (in the USA).
yes, by law you can send your children to school anywhere you choose. This applies to public schools only, and may differ amongst private schools.
If it deals with a location of where you are living in the school district the school district will ask you to go to the school whose district where you live. You can put in for an inter district transfer to the school you want to go to, but if you lie about your address it is very likely the school will find out. If you get into trouble at school that will become a factor if you get to stay or not. If you are asking about a US residency qualification there isn't one.