I think the people who do this assume they'd never push it that hard, and are probably right -- DC looks the other way on a lot of stuff and this is one of them. For me, though, I just think it's unfair to other families and would be so embarrassed if other families at our school or own our neighborhood found out we did that. I mean, you also have the option of moving, or doing the lottery, or going to your IB. So there is no reason you HAVE to commit boundary fraud, and to me it reads as "I just think I can do whatever I want." It just comes off as entitled, and probably contributes to problems like overcrowding at some schools (including JR), low IB enrollment at others, etc. So personally I can't imagine doing this or defending it, even though I'm sure it's not that hard to get away with. |
This could very well be a troll, but I submitted my kid’s JR enrollment last week and got an email over the weekend about my address verification documents (I attached the wrong thing after doing this for a million years). They are very actively pursuing early enrollment this year, and a staff member is working on them. |
| I wonder if JR is getting pressured by central office to take kids from the waitlist or add a self contained class or something and they are trying to figure out how much room they have. |
I had a similar thing happen with my enrollment (my pay stub file didn't upload fully)but what they did with both of us, it seems, is let us know we had something to correct. They did not immediately go to scheduling a home visit. That's why I think this is a troll. |
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Many years ago, our youngest enrolled at Randle-Highlands ES for PK3. It was not in April, but that spring the school reached-out to us directly for a residency check.
At the time, I thought it was odd given that we lived in-boundary for a school that is on relatively few lottery submissions and had very little over-crowding issues. We ultimately received an offer from another school before the inscpection was scheduled to occur. I remember learning that the inspector/verifier will want to look at the child's bedroom. |
Uh, OSSE sets district wide policy for publics and charters. Hello? |
| So much information is now online. If they have someone good at googling all you need is for someone to google the parents name and emergency contacts to verify. If the contact is a grandparent or friend who has the same address it may be that someone is using an address. This is more likely the more expensive a house is. Obviously some information isn’t reliable but so much if it is. By googling the address the owners name often comes up as well. |
Right. I was correcting the idea (started in the original sentiment in this particular chain) that JR isn't working on enrollment now/doesn't have staff focused on it. They do, so what op asserted is certainly plausible. Which doesn't preclude OP from being a troll! |
I don’t think it’s a troll. I suspect OP is engaging in residency fraud and why they are scheduling a home visit. |
| How did they tell you? E-mail? Letter? Phone call? |
+1. We also got a residency check in PK for a school that virtually never has a waitlist (and for which we were not only IB but lived almost right next to the school). I assumed there were just spot checks in the system and our name came up so they sent someone. When it happened, I was totally unbothered because why would I be? We were IB, the check took 5 minutes. If anything it confirmed they had received all our enrollment paperwork and I didn't have to follow up to make sure we were set for fall. I definitely didn't post on DCUM about it or consider suing the school district. It was nothing, not really much different than being asked to re-submit health forms or other random administrative stuff you sometimes have to do for DCPS. OP might be a troll trying to stir up boundary fraud controversy, but I'm betting that they actually are not IB for JR and are running some kind of scam (using someone else's address, renting a studio they don't live in) and panicking because they are about to get caught. It is definitely not unheard of for DCPS to do residency visits, though I think they fell by the wayside during Covid. Perhaps they are ramping them back up again this year and it's scaring people who were convinced that DCPS doesn't care about boundary fraud (newsflash, of course they do, if it were rampant it would cause massive issues with overcrowding plus completely undermine the lottery). |
| I wish they did this for all schools. |
That's an argument for why they *should* care about it, not why they *do* care about it! DCPS should care about a lot of things that they don't. |
| OP may have legitimately only just moved in-bounds for JR or otherwise has a child not coming from Deal or something like that. Enrolling your child in public school should be kept fairly easy for people who are following the rules. |
| I’m not OP but I also was told we’d need a home visit. My kid is at a charter school, not Deal, and I figured that was why. Our house is so messy and so filled with kid stuff that I have no concerns about passing this test! |