Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
If you don't list Van Ness as your first option, you lose your guaranteed PS3 PK4 access. This was clearly conveyed at the school meeting. Basically, if you don't list Van Ness as your first option and you lottery into another school that you place higher than Van Ness, you will lose your guaranteed PS3/PK4 access to Van Ness.
Your first sentence is not quite accurate.
If you put Van Ness anywhere on your Round 1 lottery application, you will either get into Van Ness or a school you ranked higher. You can rank VN #12 and feel confident your kid can attend. Obviously, parents should rank in terms of preference and if they only have 3 schools they prefer over VN, rank it 4th (and if VN is their first choice, rank it first!).
You're right that if you didn't list VN at all and tried to get in during Round 2, you wouldn't be guaranteed a spot for PreK. However, even in that situation you'd get a higher spot on the waitlist than any OOB kids without preference who were waitlisted, essentially jumping that line.
The interim principal explicitly said that you MUST list Van Ness as your #1 choice if you want GUARANTEED access to Van Ness (for inbound students). For example. If you list Van Ness as #2, and you get matched with your #1 choice, you WON'T be able to get into Van Ness if the seats at Van Ness are full. However, if you list Van Ness as #1, you are GUARANTEED to get a seat at Van Ness.
Anonymous wrote:
If you don't list Van Ness as your first option, you lose your guaranteed PS3 PK4 access. This was clearly conveyed at the school meeting. Basically, if you don't list Van Ness as your first option and you lottery into another school that you place higher than Van Ness, you will lose your guaranteed PS3/PK4 access to Van Ness.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Since VN has guaranteed PK, anyone who applies in-bounds is listing VN last. Some folks may make it their only choice, but there are a lot of IB folks who will put VN below DCI or Wilson-feeding schools. Just because someone put VN on their list doesn't mean they'll go there; some will continue with private options and others will get into charters or OOB they prefer. If people focused more on getting ready and excited for whatever kids get in and less on how the school will only be good if it's largely in-bounds (and only from the SE portion of the boundary, no less!) the school would probably wind up better for it.
If you don't list Van Ness as your first option, you lose your guaranteed PS3 PK4 access. This was clearly conveyed at the school meeting. Basically, if you don't list Van Ness as your first option and you lottery into another school that you place higher than Van Ness, you will lose your guaranteed PS3/PK4 access to Van Ness.
But then if Van Ness wasn't your first choice, you should be happy you got into one of the schools you ranked higher...right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Since VN has guaranteed PK, anyone who applies in-bounds is listing VN last. Some folks may make it their only choice, but there are a lot of IB folks who will put VN below DCI or Wilson-feeding schools. Just because someone put VN on their list doesn't mean they'll go there; some will continue with private options and others will get into charters or OOB they prefer. If people focused more on getting ready and excited for whatever kids get in and less on how the school will only be good if it's largely in-bounds (and only from the SE portion of the boundary, no less!) the school would probably wind up better for it.
If you don't list Van Ness as your first option, you lose your guaranteed PS3 PK4 access. This was clearly conveyed at the school meeting. Basically, if you don't list Van Ness as your first option and you lottery into another school that you place higher than Van Ness, you will lose your guaranteed PS3/PK4 access to Van Ness.
Anonymous wrote:Since VN has guaranteed PK, anyone who applies in-bounds is listing VN last. Some folks may make it their only choice, but there are a lot of IB folks who will put VN below DCI or Wilson-feeding schools. Just because someone put VN on their list doesn't mean they'll go there; some will continue with private options and others will get into charters or OOB they prefer. If people focused more on getting ready and excited for whatever kids get in and less on how the school will only be good if it's largely in-bounds (and only from the SE portion of the boundary, no less!) the school would probably wind up better for it.
Anonymous wrote:Just curious why this makes a difference to the OP: if I'd posted "I live in Congress Heights and am glad for a school that's on my way to work downtown and feeds into Jefferson and Eastern" would you be more or less likely to consider the school than if I wrote "I live in Tenleytown and since my IB school doesn't offer PK and I work at the Navy Yard it seems like a good choice until K"?
Anonymous wrote:Just curious why this makes a difference to the OP: if I'd posted "I live in Congress Heights and am glad for a school that's on my way to work downtown and feeds into Jefferson and Eastern" would you be more or less likely to consider the school than if I wrote "I live in Tenleytown and since my IB school doesn't offer PK and I work at the Navy Yard it seems like a good choice until K"?