Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Believe it or not, DCPS may have more pressimg concerns than releasing data that will allow you to obsess over every aspect of this process.
It's hardly obsessing to want to know if you should even bother using one of your lottery slots on a given school if there is pretty much zero chance you will ever get in.
I think you can pretty well figure that out based on the data already. Plus, very few people actually have more than 12 schools to put down anyway.
Not true x 2
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Believe it or not, DCPS may have more pressimg concerns than releasing data that will allow you to obsess over every aspect of this process.
It's hardly obsessing to want to know if you should even bother using one of your lottery slots on a given school if there is pretty much zero chance you will ever get in.
I think you can pretty well figure that out based on the data already. Plus, very few people actually have more than 12 schools to put down anyway.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Believe it or not, DCPS may have more pressimg concerns than releasing data that will allow you to obsess over every aspect of this process.
It's hardly obsessing to want to know if you should even bother using one of your lottery slots on a given school if there is pretty much zero chance you will ever get in.
And to add to that, to assess if you even have a chance of getting your own neighborhood school or if you will realistically need to make other plans if a significant number of IB kids are waitlisted.
I would love to know who the DCPS apologist is who comes on every single one of these threads and plays the whole "nothing to see here" routine. This data has been provided every year for at least the last decade. This data is important. This lottery is run by our elected government and should be accountable. The lottery allows for the claiming of various "preferences" which in itself creates an opportunity for abuse. DCPS has not formally announced why it has stopped releasing certain data, but has rather left residents to figure it out for themselves by reading minutes of a meeting. Where's the press release or announcement? But fine...someone on this board continues to pooh-pooh every person who dares to question. Are you on DCPS payroll or what? Is it Nathaniel Beers? Kaya? Who?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Believe it or not, DCPS may have more pressimg concerns than releasing data that will allow you to obsess over every aspect of this process.
It's hardly obsessing to want to know if you should even bother using one of your lottery slots on a given school if there is pretty much zero chance you will ever get in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Believe it or not, DCPS may have more pressimg concerns than releasing data that will allow you to obsess over every aspect of this process.
It's hardly obsessing to want to know if you should even bother using one of your lottery slots on a given school if there is pretty much zero chance you will ever get in.
And to add to that, to assess if you even have a chance of getting your own neighborhood school or if you will realistically need to make other plans if a significant number of IB kids are waitlisted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Believe it or not, DCPS may have more pressimg concerns than releasing data that will allow you to obsess over every aspect of this process.
It's hardly obsessing to want to know if you should even bother using one of your lottery slots on a given school if there is pretty much zero chance you will ever get in.
Anonymous wrote:Believe it or not, DCPS may have more pressimg concerns than releasing data that will allow you to obsess over every aspect of this process.
Anonymous wrote:DCPS will soon collapse when 70% of kids in DC attend charters. Can't run a system with just extreme rich and poor families.