Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:May be moving to DC and am worried about the school situation. I have heard some of the lotteries are not truly blind. What is the deal with the school lotteries? So scary to move to a place where you're literally gambling with your child's education.
You are overstating the risk. If you want to go to a good school guaranteed, then buy or rent a home within the boundaries of a good school in Northwest DC. That way, you can try the lottery, but if you are not successful, you still receive a quality education by right.
Which neighborhoods are recommended with good in-bound schools for our budget ($450-550K)? See now why I would think we would be gambling with our child's education?
Tell us what kind of property you want to buy. If it has to be more than a 1BR+den condo, good luck. At that price range you will have a very tough time with schools unless you are willing to embrace a newly gentrifying school. This is what we did and I'm very happy with it. But you will have a really tough time buying ANYTHING in a good school district at that price.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:May be moving to DC and am worried about the school situation. I have heard some of the lotteries are not truly blind. What is the deal with the school lotteries? So scary to move to a place where you're literally gambling with your child's education.
This is pretty insulting OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:May be moving to DC and am worried about the school situation. I have heard some of the lotteries are not truly blind. What is the deal with the school lotteries? So scary to move to a place where you're literally gambling with your child's education.
You are overstating the risk. If you want to go to a good school guaranteed, then buy or rent a home within the boundaries of a good school in Northwest DC. That way, you can try the lottery, but if you are not successful, you still receive a quality education by right.
Which neighborhoods are recommended with good in-bound schools for our budget ($450-550K)? See now why I would think we would be gambling with our child's education?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:May be moving to DC and am worried about the school situation. I have heard some of the lotteries are not truly blind. What is the deal with the school lotteries? So scary to move to a place where you're literally gambling with your child's education.
You are overstating the risk. If you want to go to a good school guaranteed, then buy or rent a home within the boundaries of a good school in Northwest DC. That way, you can try the lottery, but if you are not successful, you still receive a quality education by right.
Anonymous wrote:Whoa whoa whoa. Ok, first you need to understand the admittedly crazy system. There are 4 ways into school.
1) Attend your in-bound school (starting at kindergarten). You do not need to lottery. You just need to sign up.
2) Attend a charter school. You will need to lottery. The vast majority of charter schools use the centralized lottery which is very transparent.
3) Attend an out-of-bound DCPS school. You will also need to lottery. This is through the centralized lottery.
4) Attend PK3 or PK4 which is all through lottery. Apart from the few charter schools that still have their own lotteries, you will go through the centralized system. If you are in bounds for a particular school or have siblings there, your chances are better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:May be moving to DC and am worried about the school situation. I have heard some of the lotteries are not truly blind. What is the deal with the school lotteries? So scary to move to a place where you're literally gambling with your child's education.
This is pretty insulting OP.
Anonymous wrote:May be moving to DC and am worried about the school situation. I have heard some of the lotteries are not truly blind. What is the deal with the school lotteries? So scary to move to a place where you're literally gambling with your child's education.
Anonymous wrote:May be moving to DC and am worried about the school situation. I have heard some of the lotteries are not truly blind. What is the deal with the school lotteries? So scary to move to a place where you're literally gambling with your child's education.
Anonymous wrote:May be moving to DC and am worried about the school situation. I have heard some of the lotteries are not truly blind. What is the deal with the school lotteries? So scary to move to a place where you're literally gambling with your child's education.