| Then they should spell this out as an option in the lottery, so families can choose "IB but applying OOB" from the menu, instead of posting incomplete addresses. Just better to have things above board, even in DCPS. |
That's a great suggestion to make to My School DC for next year's lottery. |
It's a loophole because OOB spots are meant for OOB students. If I am IB and apply for an OOB spot but don't get it, then I can just enroll IB. How is that fair? Not to mention, if you are IB and don't enroll until the last minute, how would schools even know how many OOB spots they have available? It just makes no sense whatsoever. |
No, OOB spots are meant for anyone in the city. If you are IB, and you take an OOB slot, then you haven't actually taken away any OOB slots--they will net have to just go one more down the wait list, since you are no longer taking the seat IB. It's not like you get to hold two seats, both an IB seat and and OOB seat. And the boundary revisions make clear that someone IB who wants to stay at their school when the move OOB needs to secure a spot through the lottery--which most people will want to do when they are actually IB, or they will risk not getting a spot at all. I am not IB for a school where this strategy would make sense, but I don't see it at all as a loophole. |
Not true. We own an apt near our IB school but could use an additional bedroom. Unfortunately, we cannot afford to buy a house near our IB school. I hadn't though of this as an option but I might do it now. |
| I was in a tiny crappy (as in health hazard - kids testing positive for lead) condo IB for Eaton and this was what I was told. The only way I could keep my child at Eaton after we moved (obviously we couldn't afford a house IB) was to lottery OB for a spot even though we were IB at the time. Fortunately, we got into a charter and bought a three bedroom EOTP. It is not friggin' gaming the system people. |