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DC Public and Public Charter Schools
Reply to "I hate the advantage people with multiple kids have in the school lottery"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]And yet, every family goes through this. How do you think the first kid of multi-sibling family gets in??[/quote] They go through it in PK for their first but most families with multiple kids can exercise the advantage by the time their oldest is in 1st or 2nd since most families have kids within 3-4 years of each other. But if you have one kid and strike out in PK then each year after that you will be trying to get into a better school in the lottery and you might lose out to kids with siblings each year. Also families with siblings can pull kids in going both directions so it still benefits the older kids even if not in PK. So no -- not everyone has the same experience. Having multiple kids in the system is a definite advantage and only becomes more so the older your kids get (and given the challenges with middle school in most of the city that might be the biggest advantage of all -- [b]look at how many spots at the Latins and BASIS go to siblings in that 5th grade lottery[/b]).[/quote] Yes, but the point that the PP above this is making is that all those siblings that get in to Latin or BASIS or wherever else, are getting in because at some point a kid in that family got in without sibling preference. And they got into the school even though some of the available spots in that year went to people who had sibling preference at that time. And yes, of course not everyone has the same experience. In fact people have wildly different experiences. Some of these experiences are made better or easier by having more than one kid, and some of these experiences are made worse or harder by having more than one kid. But the bolded sentence makes it seem like you don't understand the lottery.[/quote] I totally agree that in many respects, the older sibling has equal chances to an only. There is one exception that I've seen play out many times -- families who want a spot at a Deal or Hardy feeder (who live out of bounds) are often able to eventually get one, and the sibling (either older or younger) pulls the other one in. this actually happened to us (though we didn't accept), and I know many other families this happened to. An only probably also would have gotten in at some point, but the siblings have double the chances to get in every year. [/quote]
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