| What do you mean, boundary restrictions don't apply? They got in-bounds preference for PK4. |
To whom did they claim this? To you? In the school directory? Have you been inside the house or just peeking through windows? These aren't real questions. Just realized how creepy you sound. |
| Wow - if this is true, someone has got some BALLS. |
It is definitely cheating, even for PK, if the family in question misstated their address, because there is an IB preference in the lottery. If the rare circumstances that you cite above are true in this case, then the issue will be resolved quickly. The proper thing to do is just report the info you have and then move on. |
| They should have run a better scam than that, if you're right. Parents should only desire intelligent criminals to send their offspring your school, not the bottom of the barrel, jeez. The best criminal minds find ways to screw other peoples' families legally -- you know, hedge fund managers and vulture capitalists. GO GET 'EM!! |
I agree. And wonder what in the world prompted OP to Google a 4-year-old. |
| It's not creepy if your school is clogged every morning with Maryland tags. Like Mine is. The parents run in (if they don't just make their kid run in, so you never actually see them) and if you DO see the parents, they don't talk to you or anyone and beyond that you never see them at school events. Then you see the same iffy scenario happening again in Pre-K, and you have friends who actually live in the neighborhood who were waitlisted. I don't think it's creepy at all to be concerned about this situation. Why do YOU think it's creepy that other people are creeped out by such dodgy behavior? |
report to the main office with as many specifics as possible. |
Because if you actually cared, you would report the family in question to the school, the district or someone other than DCUM. If it bothers you so much, do something to address the issue. If you're just coming here to gossip, yes, it's creepy that you care so much about where a 4 year old goes to school. |
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Don't put stock in license plates. Many families have nannies or care-givers or grandparents with their own cars who take kids to school. Many live in VA or MD.
Report your concerns to your Principal and move on. |
| Look, report it if you are worried but you never know what the circumstances are and they may have a legitimate reason for being there (IEP, head start, custody issues, not moved into their new house yet, who knows). |
Still wondering what prompted you to research one particular child. As someone in a dual-income household struggling to figure out childcare around school and work schedules, I'm realizing how some of the solutions we've come up with could invite a malcontent busybody to start tracking my 4-year-old. It's not easy finding someone who has time and a car that we can trust to do pick up and drop off. Almost all our babysitters and nearby family live - guess where? - outside of DC. I'm definitely not in your school, though. This kind of thing is just one of many that make that part of town really unappealing. |
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How do you know they claimed that address? Directories haven't come out yet have they?
The child may have been placed into the class even if OOB. Principal discretion. |
The A-Z directory is available online. |
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Oh, please. Just because the OP isn't giving specifics doesn't mean they don't know something. Yes, it sucks that parents are called on to rat each other out, but OSSE doesn't do a good job of finding residency cheaters. There's no danger that a grandparent or babysitter is going to be mistaken for a genuine fraud.
OP, report and move on. They may be legit, maybe not. |