I don't think boundary fraud is widespread, for a variety of reasons including the fact that people might find out and it puts your kid in a terrible position. We know multiple people who could have done it (because a relative lives IB for a very desirable school) but chose not to for this specific reason -- they didn't want to have to lie to fellow families at the school, and they especially didn't want their kids to lie (or to lie to their kids). But even if it's not widespread or enforced, it doesn't make it good. It's one thing to argue that it's not worth discussing because it's fairly rare. Fair enough. But I don't understand the people arguing on the thread that it's actually fine. It's obviously not -- it exacerbates some existing problems within DCPS (like overcrowding at some schools and under enrollment at other, the lack of community at many schools). And it's just dishonest. I'm not running around trying to hunt down boundary cheats and report them, but some of the comments on this thread in support of the practice are insane. No. It's unethical and wrong. I'm never going to say it's okay, there is always a better answer. |
Boundary fraud, where someone lies about their address or otherwise, is extremely rare compared to residency fraud for Pre-k or JR. There is pretty insane residency fraud at our charter for pre-k. Some of it is obvious, some is marginal “they have their grandparent’s address” stuff (which… I’m mostly ok with, grandparents are doing most of the parenting in those cases anyway). |
No, as far as I can tell, not widespread, particularly since MacArthur opened and a number of Ward 6 elementary schools improved by leaps and bounds in the last 5 years or so. It's just a twisted fixation of holier than thou types on these threads. |
You are the only person in the thread aggressively defending the practice of boundary cheating while offering no practical proposal to dissuade people inclined to lie and cheat to stop doing so. Your lament seems to be that people can't possibly be expected to send their kids to weak IB schools so it is of course understandable if they cheat to send their kids elsewhere. It makes no sense. If you don't like the MS and HS options on CH, there are a whole variety of options to you within the rules. You can lottery into a feeder school for a MS or HS you prefer. There are charter MSs including some that are very well liked by the families who attend, like ITDS. You can lottery into one of the DCI feeders if you are willing to do immersion. You can move IB for your preferred school, even temporarily while renting out your "forever house." You can send your kid to private. You could also work with your neighbors to invest in your IB schools, if you are so deeply invested in your surrounding community, that's precisely how schools like Maury increased their IB buy in and built strong reputations in the first place. It's entirely unclear why, given all of these options, you are still defending the idea that some people simply have NO CHOICE but to lie about their residence in order to cheat their way into schools clear across town. You are twisting yourself into knots to justify a choice that is not really justifiable. |
NP. Don't bite, PP. Not worth responding. |
So wait, my taxes are ok to support a non existing police force that lets shop lifters and violent criminals off the hook but I can’t rent a second home to have my kid go to a school that’s better than the one where math proficiency is 37%??
If the system was functional, I would GLADLY use it. But it’s not. |
Are you politically active? Do you go to ANC meetings or testify at before the council or campaign for someone besides Bowser to become mayor? If you are not working to improve the governance, then no, you can't use the non-functional system as an excuse to cheat (though I acknowledge that renting a second home is better than flat out lying). |
You can but it’s fraud. |
Sure, rent in W3 and actually live there. Fine.
|
Are you actually suggesting that you should be allowed to cheat and break the rules so long as someone, somewhere, at some point, broke a different rule? I would hope that your child would know better, even if you don't. |
This thread is nuts. Why would you go out of your way and do unethical things for years just to go to mediocre to subpar schools in DC? Just rent or move to the burbs for much better options if you strike out in the lottery.
Are people really that desperate to stay in the city?? |
This is actually a textbook example of believing you are entitled to more in DC than others simply because you have the wealth. They want to keep their larger home and walkability but won't consider McKinley even though their own kid apparently couldn't cut it at BASIS and didn't get into Walls or Banneker? Come on. They've had every advantage and it still wasn't enough so they decided to skirt ethics. That's just privilege with an extra dose of racism. |
Ding ding! And yet 400 people will tell you why that's not possible because XYZ |
It is absolutely widespread. I know of multiple families in all 3 schools my kids have attended doing this. And if I know about it because they aren’t being careful (some even admitting this to aquaintances), imagine what the real numbers are. It’s disgusting. |
Yes. I grew up in the burbs here and it’s hell on earth. Also, the schools people cheat to get into aren’t bad. |