Anonymous wrote:In looking at each school's information sheet in the lottery database I'm confused by the listing of preferences. are they listed in any particular order? I would assume they would be listed from strongest/first preference to least. But, in many cases "proximity" preference is listed above "sibling enrolled" (meaning OOB sibling...sidenote...I know they are trying to get away from the term "out of boundary" but that only makes this more confusing!). Is it true that a family with proximity preference would get a spot before an OOB family who is already attending the school? That's whack. Also, I noticed "sibling accepted" is listed before "sibling enrolled" in the preference listings. I really hope this is saying a family with a kid already at a school get preference behind a family who isn't even enrolled yet.
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone have issue whith posting this infomration on a .org as opposed to a .gov?
Anonymous wrote:I just tried to log in with my account from last year. Do old accounts not work anymore? If so, that is beyond stupid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why make a dummy account if you're going to apply later? You don't need to submit your picks today; you can save them for later.
I'm not applying at all. I'm a writer.
Then why are you annoyed that the charters don't post the anticipated seats? Surely your writerly research has revealed that charters won't know how many seats they will have available for new students until siblings are accounted for and re-enrollment forms have been submitted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why make a dummy account if you're going to apply later? You don't need to submit your picks today; you can save them for later.
I'm not applying at all. I'm a writer.
Anonymous wrote:I just tried to log in with my account from last year. Do old accounts not work anymore? If so, that is beyond stupid.
Anonymous wrote:Why make a dummy account if you're going to apply later? You don't need to submit your picks today; you can save them for later.