^ so if you put your safety school #12 could you be risking not getting in because of all the people who ranked it higher? |
No. When your child's number is selected, it sees if there is room in #1, #2, and so on down the line until it finds a match. If there is no room in 1-11 but therebisbin 12, you get I to 12. But it is not the case that was school has its own lottery (as PPs stated). |
But, PP is somewhat correct. If I consider Sela my safety school. But 300 others pick it as #1...I'm not getting in. |
That way, it really matches people with schools they want to attend. If I'm considering Sela a safety school, but you have it ranked as your first choice, should I got the spot because of luck? There still is some luck to it, but the person who has ranked it #1 obviously wants to go there and has a passion for the mission of the school. The person who ranks it #12 has less so. |
No, because the ranking of the schools does not affect the probability of your child's # being chosen. If child A cones up first and ranks Sela 12 and doesn't get into 1-11, but there is space at Sela, she is placed at Sela. That is even if child B has ranked Sela #1--but child B's lottery number is selected after child A. |
I'm so glad my school isn't participating in this. |
If you're already in, how does this affect you at all? |
Because I'm going to be answering questions on the 11th and my experience is that parents are stressed and will ask the representatives about lottery, lottery and lottery. I thought I'd try to educate myself a little to be as helpful as I can. You can imagine a world where people have your best interests in mind, right? |
Link to that information? That isn't clear from the website at all. In fact, the FAQs seem to imply the opposite. |
I called and asked. Suggest you do the same. It is based on the lottery in Denver, so if you read up on that it should give you a sense of how things work. |
My understanding when I called and asked was they are using a different algorithm. Did you talk to myschoolsdc? |
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Sorry, my reply came through in the quoted text. I called the Deputy Mayor for Education's office. They emphasized that there is no way to "game" the system by placing a less popular school high on your list. The best "strategy" for everyone is to list in order of true preference. |
So if my kid's lottery # is picked, his #1 is IT, but they just filled their spots, will he be #1 on their waitlist and admitted in school #2 if there is space? |
Yes, he would be placed on the wait list for IT (at whatever # they are up to on the wait list at that point), and be admitted to #2 if there is space. If not, then wait listed at #2, and admitted at #3 if there is spaceā¦. and so on down the line. I'm not sure why you ask whether he would be #1 on the wait list. That would only happen in the very rare instance that he was the very first person whose lottery # came up after all the slots were filled for the grade. |