I suspect that's not the case. *A lot* of people do it for Deal/JR purposes. But no one has the data to really know. |
Yes I entered the address of the home I own to see if I could lottery into current sixth grade feeder (Deal) if we choose to move into the home we own as opposed to keep renting. |
I think this information should be centralized with myschooldc/osse so there could be data on it. And then it should be programmed in along with the student's ID number so the policy of not getting rights to the destination school can actually be enforced. |
Did you see the metro DC thread on DC government return to office? Who exactly are going to be doing those policy changes, SOPs, IT system modifications, testing, training, and tracking? The same high grade employees who are all now job hunting because after not getting their COLA or performance bonuses this year, are now being told they need to RTO to support the local economy. So no, nobody's going to be spearheading system improvements like these. Not anytime soon under this administration at least. |
And yet this is a perennial question on this board. How long do I have to rent in W3 before my pre4 kid has rights all the way through Whatever ES even when I move back to a neighborhood where I won’t use the IB school? My kids aren’t in W3 schools but it’s pretty obvious that this is what’s going on in this OP. |
So? |
+1. It has been asked and answered, it's just not a satisfactory answer to DCUM. There is no minimum amount of time you have to live IB, as long as you are actually living IB and attending the IB school when the verification is made. That is for administrative simplification and public policy reasons that have nothing to do with UMC system gamers. |
| This can become a widespread problem if there’s an influx of people who catch on to this loophole. |
*wanking motion* |
| As long as you actually live there. |
Wouldn't be a problem if they would actually crack down on out of boundary families. |
Because the result is absurd overcrowding at the largest (by a long shot!) middle school and high school. Besides the discomfort of crowded halls and cafeterias, the imbalance has lots of downsides. At Deal and J-R, it means exceedingly large classes, sports teams that are very hard to get on and then are unbeatable, and very long commutes for some students. For other schools, it means a dearth of enrolled IB students and always being outshined in academics, athletics, and extra-curriculars. It's bad for DCPS and city residents to have such a tilted school system. Demographics start off tilted, but rather the OOB policies worsen the dynamic. |
I’ll add that this is just one more way wealthy parents buy their way into what they want. I see a lot of judgement from people on DCUM saying poor parents “should plan better,” or “make better choices in life” so that they can live in bounds for better schools. I have never seen that kind of condemnation for parents who lie and rent an apartment so their kid can go to a certain school. And let’s be honest—parents who do that are not actually moving into those studios they rent just to get their kid in the school. And then those schools become so overcrowded, in part due to this kind of gaming, that there is no way a kid from a family not gaming the system will ever be able to lottery in. |
It’s allowed. No lie needed. |
That’s the least of the point here. |