Anonymous wrote:Do you actually live IB? Do you have a meth lab in your house? What's the big deal?
Anonymous wrote:If you are in bounds, your child has a legal right to attend the school. You can say ok to the visit, but that you do not plan to ensure that you or anyone else is home. They can visit, but they cannot compel you to actually be home when they visit
Anonymous wrote:If you are in bounds, your child has a legal right to attend the school. You can say ok to the visit, but that you do not plan to ensure that you or anyone else is home. They can visit, but they cannot compel you to actually be home when they visit
Anonymous wrote:If you are in bounds, your child has a legal right to attend the school. You can say ok to the visit, but that you do not plan to ensure that you or anyone else is home. They can visit, but they cannot compel you to actually be home when they visit
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is definitely not true for all new students to JR. But it might be true for students coming from outside DCPS. Considering how many people go to charters because they don’t like their IB options, maybe the charter-to-JR path has a disproportionate number of people trying to skirt boundary/residency rules?
We were told we have to do a home visit - we are coming from private school, but DC has a sibling in DCPS ES now (which is IB for JRHS) and her re-enrollment has been accepted. So doesn’t make any real sense.
Anonymous wrote:This is definitely not true for all new students to JR. But it might be true for students coming from outside DCPS. Considering how many people go to charters because they don’t like their IB options, maybe the charter-to-JR path has a disproportionate number of people trying to skirt boundary/residency rules?