COSAs are a pretty divisive topic. My kid is on one, and we had to go through hellfire to get it, even though our home school was fairly desirable and the COSA school, by DCUM standards at least, is not. They don't give them out like candy, though they may have at one time. There are many factors that go into whether or not a COSA is approved, and it is supposedly harder to get on to an overcrowded school. The COSAs for ES are only good for ES, so families are kicked back to the home school for MS and HS. A lot of the hardships disappear when the child is legally old enough to be home alone and get her/himself to and from school by themselves. |
Yes, and I get that for some people like yourself, there are legitimate reasons; but we can't ignore the high proportion of families who take on COSAs just for the sake of putting their children in a more desirable school. This happens a lot. |
No of course not. If your kid is actually smart they will be with the top cohort in middle and high school. Also if you are the typical hyper DCUM parent the big fish small pond applies here. Its much easier to hit the "great" college lottery out of Rockville or Richard Montgomery vs Wootton.
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Not sure how much of a difference this would really make anyway. Aren't most schools in MCPS overcrowded? There are quite a few Out of Boundary kids attending Barnsley who would be assigned to other schools that would be pretty equivalent - Flower Valley or Rock Creek or Brookhaven. I would assume that all those schools are overcrowded. FWIW, I do hope they change the COSA regulations but lots of kids attending Barnsley don't have the COSA anyway. They simply attend using a 'false' address. I would guess that it's incredibly difficult to enforce the housing requirement? How do you really prove where someone lives? |
Happens all the time. Not sure how common in MS/HS but we know of so many people who either have a COSA for ES or simply attend a different school than their home school. I have also heard that cOSAs can be difficult, but DD has about a dozen friends who are using a 'different' address from their real address. |
How do you know that the majority of families only get COSAs to put their kids in a "better" school? |
I said a high proportion of families, not majority. I don't have stats in front of me but I can tell you off the bat, every single family i know who have COSA's (I know a handful) do not have a true and valid reason for moving to the different school. I've seen the strategies- kids have to go to grandma's house after school for after care; mom "has" to go to work super early so her kids have to go to the elementary school nearby work (which happens to be in Bethesda), etc. |
Not the PP, but who cares what the reason is?? I also know of about a dozen families who live out of boundary at our ES. How is childcare a valid excuse when most of the schools have some sort of aftercare option? Or families can hire a sitter. We've been at our ES for 5 years now so we have gotten to know these families pretty well. They're pretty up front about living out of boundary. It's no big secret. How about kids go to the school that they are zone for unless it's for a special program. End of story. |
Poor MCPS. When they're flexible, that's bad. When they're inflexible, that's bad too. How do the out-of-boundary kids at your school affect you? |
Our school is insanely overcrowded. There are portables all over the play area in the back, so the blacktop is pretty much totally covered. They ran out of classrooms this year, so they had to take over the computer lab to use it for a classroom. The kids get smooshed together into one classroom for indoor recess because there are only a limited number of aides. I can go on and on and on. It affects ALL the kids when the school is overcrowded. If you feel that it's a non issue, then please tell us which ES your kid goes to. Maybe we can send all our COSAs over your way.
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PP which school are you at? |
Would your child's school be at or under capacity if there weren't any kids there on COSAs? |
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Please search this forum for King Farm in Rockville and the side that belongs to Richard Montgomery.
You will be amazed how you wonderful new community you can find with amazing schools that nobody on this board talks about and how fabulous it is. With pictures. Just search fro King Farm to learn more. Flip through the pictures, you won't find anything like that anywhere else so close to DC right on the metro, with two gigantic community houses, pools, shops, and all community events with great IB elementary, middle and IB magnet high.. (King Farm belong to two school clusters, divided by Redland Blvd. If you have kids, better schools are between Gude and Redland Blvd, if you don't have kids get less expensive home just as gorgeous in the other part beween Redland and Shady Grove) Awesome place! awesome, that community feel everyone is looking for. Not old isolating neighborhood like Bethesda or Chavy Ch. Everybody is walking, streets are charming, lots of dog owners.. lots of kids.. Highly educated crowd, lots of Europeans, Diplomats, Scientists.. Here is King Farm at glance: https://www.google.com/maps/place/King+Farm+Community+Center/@39.109145,-77.170564,3a,75y,90t/data=!3m8!1e2!3m6!1s-gA7tEFZNSD4%2FV7oOB2Ih1LI%2FAAAAAAAALS8%2FuYPkGD8Je08d9LZI1Ebkv_FrLtVRlP7WQCJkC!2e4!3e12!6s%2F%2Flh5.googleusercontent.com%2F-gA7tEFZNSD4%2FV7oOB2Ih1LI%2FAAAAAAAALS8%2FuYPkGD8Je08d9LZI1Ebkv_FrLtVRlP7WQCJkC%2Fs114-k-no%2F!7i4032!8i3024!4m8!1m2!2m1!1sKing+farm!3m4!1s0x89b7d29f71c43bef:0x72a7c64550d0022c!8m2!3d39.10902!4d-77.1711378!6m1!1e1 |
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