Anonymous wrote:The MS years start at Inspired and Capital City at 5th as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Capital City
EL Haynes
Creative Minds
Inspired Teaching
Two Rivers (but that's kinda far from where you live)
Bear in mind that a lot of these schools do well in preschool and lower elementary but then not quite as well in upper elementary and middle school. Just because a middle school exists doesn't mean you're going to actually be happy with it.
OP here - thank you! Yes, I know I might not be happy with the options, I'm just trying to get a list I can work off of. The full list of 123 public charters is intimidating and unhelpful!
If you are interested in/considering immersion, then there are the DCI feeders (though the strength of the feed, from a guarantee to just a preference, varies): Yu Ying, DC Billingual, Stokes, LAMB, Mundo Verde
Lamb doesn’t backfill students, so you have a better chance to get into dci from lamb or dc bilingual than from Mundo verde or stokes who have expanded.
DP, and just to be clear, these schools all have a feeder preference to DCI. What the PP is referring to in terms of "strength of feed" refers to two things:
1) DCI feeds from schools with Spanish, French, and Mandarin. There are way more Spanish students than anything else, and while there are more Spanish slots in DCI than French or Mandarin, as DCI gets crowded, you will likely have a much easier time getting a feeder spot with French or Mandarin than Spanish.
2) Each feeder school gets a certain number of feeder spots. Stokes and Mundo Verde have both expanded to new campuses in recent years, so it may be harder to get a spot from these schools than some of the smaller schools with just one campus.
In other words, some people believe that you stand a better chance of being guaranteed a DCI spot if you go to a school like Yu Ying or Stokes French, than a school like Mundo Verde or LAMB. But a lot of this is speculation based on current trends. DCI might expand before your kids reach MS, or things may change in terms of the language feeds.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're trying to figure out next steps for our preschoolers. We're happy with our inbound DCPS elementary, but not with the middle school. Obviously don't want to put all our eggs into one basket for the lottery for 6th grade, so we're wondering if we can try to get into an elementary school in the new few years that would take us through 8th grade, either because the school goes through 8th or it feeds into a middle school. I've been digging around the DC Charter School websites, but there doesn't seem to be an easy way to find this information.
We're in the Petworth area, but willing to travel a bit for decent options.
Reminder - many middle school charters start 5th grade. 6th grade you options are really slim
So basically, for 5th you can lottery into Latin, the new Latin campus, or BASIS. That's basically your only shot at those schools, ever. For 6th you can lottery into DCI (slim chances) or other DCPS middle schools that aren't Deal and Hardy. Some schools (EL Haynes, Capital City, Sojourner Truth), you can lottery in at any grade but chances vary.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're trying to figure out next steps for our preschoolers. We're happy with our inbound DCPS elementary, but not with the middle school. Obviously don't want to put all our eggs into one basket for the lottery for 6th grade, so we're wondering if we can try to get into an elementary school in the new few years that would take us through 8th grade, either because the school goes through 8th or it feeds into a middle school. I've been digging around the DC Charter School websites, but there doesn't seem to be an easy way to find this information.
We're in the Petworth area, but willing to travel a bit for decent options.
Reminder - many middle school charters start 5th grade. 6th grade you options are really slim
Anonymous wrote:We're trying to figure out next steps for our preschoolers. We're happy with our inbound DCPS elementary, but not with the middle school. Obviously don't want to put all our eggs into one basket for the lottery for 6th grade, so we're wondering if we can try to get into an elementary school in the new few years that would take us through 8th grade, either because the school goes through 8th or it feeds into a middle school. I've been digging around the DC Charter School websites, but there doesn't seem to be an easy way to find this information.
We're in the Petworth area, but willing to travel a bit for decent options.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Capital City
EL Haynes
Creative Minds
Inspired Teaching
Two Rivers (but that's kinda far from where you live)
Bear in mind that a lot of these schools do well in preschool and lower elementary but then not quite as well in upper elementary and middle school. Just because a middle school exists doesn't mean you're going to actually be happy with it.
OP here - thank you! Yes, I know I might not be happy with the options, I'm just trying to get a list I can work off of. The full list of 123 public charters is intimidating and unhelpful!
If you are interested in/considering immersion, then there are the DCI feeders (though the strength of the feed, from a guarantee to just a preference, varies): Yu Ying, DC Billingual, Stokes, LAMB, Mundo Verde
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Capital City
EL Haynes
Creative Minds
Inspired Teaching
Two Rivers (but that's kinda far from where you live)
Bear in mind that a lot of these schools do well in preschool and lower elementary but then not quite as well in upper elementary and middle school. Just because a middle school exists doesn't mean you're going to actually be happy with it.
OP here - thank you! Yes, I know I might not be happy with the options, I'm just trying to get a list I can work off of. The full list of 123 public charters is intimidating and unhelpful!
Anonymous wrote:Capital City
EL Haynes
Creative Minds
Inspired Teaching
Two Rivers (but that's kinda far from where you live)
Bear in mind that a lot of these schools do well in preschool and lower elementary but then not quite as well in upper elementary and middle school. Just because a middle school exists doesn't mean you're going to actually be happy with it.