I answered above. Our DCPS school required the DC residency paperwork and proof of age to accept our lottery spot and enroll. Wasn’t hard for us since we were just OOB, but it was very clear and firm in their communications. Health forms could come later. Might vary school to school, but I assume OP’s is a desirable school with a longer waitlist like ours and therefore would have a similar process. |
To enroll / register - you need to show paperwork that you are a resident. To go to school - you need to show paperwork that you have the required dental / medical items complated. |
Yeah but you forgot “accept.” I believe that there are some schools that will require the residency proof to accept the spot, but that doesn’t mean they all do. Some schools allow you to accept first and do the paperwork later. FWIW I stopped turning in medical forms years ago in DCPS and nobody ever said anything. I don’t think I ever did a dental form. |
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Call the school and find out the date that you need to prove residency to register. If you're nervous about outing yourself as not being a full resident of DC then say you will be out of town a lot of the summer and want to make sure you don't miss the date. Or just say that you're moving and need to know the date so you can have your documentation in hand. Then you'll know how much time you have.
Note that to prove residency you need to go to the school and provide documentation - a DC address and options for various ways to prove your address - a utility bill in your name at that address, a DC drivers license, a passport with your DC address, etc. You absolutely can't fake it unless you go to ridiculous and illegal lengths. I don't recall this time as being immediately after accepting a spot, but it's definitely before school starts. It's likely that different charters and DCPS have different dates for this so it's perfectly valid to call and ask. |
In our experience accepting a lottery spot (for a school that is routinely mentioned here as a top 5 or so), there was zero difference between accepting and enrolling. It was one and the same. And on the day they did the tour and took paperwork, they turned away people who didn’t have it and told them they needed to return with everything, and it must be done before the fast approaching deadline. As noted it probably varies wildly school to school, but it was clear as day with ours that if you would not be accepting a spot without proper residency docs and proof of age. |
In my experience - the charters / application HS did not differentiate "accepting" the lottery spot and enrolling. |
Same here, at DCPS. I don't think there's a difference between accepting and enrolling in DC schools. They're the same. Enrolling is how you accept. |
The distinction is that - not everyone who enrolls need to "accept" lottery spot - but everyone who accepts lottery spot does so through enrollment |
PP here. Sure, sure. What I mean, is, there's no such thing as "accept" separate from enrolling. You want to accept a seat? You need to enroll. |
| So you want to know how you can cheat a dc resident out of a spot? Nice. |
| I was overseas when I did the lottery and was told by DC MySchool that every school has a homeless liaison and if I was going to be in a hotel while looking for a DC rental I would technically be considered homeless. I ultimately didn’t get a lottery spot but was number 2 on a waitlist so I needed a backup plan prior to securing a rental. |
But op isn't homeless. She has a home not in DC |
| Omg are we really telling someone to pretend to be experiencing homelessness to take a spot away from an actual dc resident |
+1 |
If she is living in DC at the time of enrollment, even if she doesn't yet have a lease or permanent housing, the school will figure out how to enroll her. |