Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Will older child still be enrolled at the charter you're hoping to send the younger one to, though?
Some schools (IT for example) are PK-8. Others (Achievement Prep, Capital City) are actually separate schools for elementary and middle schools, though they share a campus. If your older child is in one of the latter types of schools, the younger child may not qualify for sibling preference at the elementary just because the older is enrolled at the middle school. Best to check with the school, and with MySchoolDC.
Yes, she will be enrolled at the school during lottery time. Thanks again.
Not sure that is the relevant question. While it's called a "sibling attending" preference the FAQ for MSDC says "If your child is admitted with a sibling preference, be prepared to prove that your children are siblings when you enroll them" (emphasis added). It kind of goes against the purpose of the preference to take a kid whose sibling will never attend school with them. But it wouldn't be the first nonsensical thing DC schools have done. I'd just check, and get the answer in writing, so you don't end up with an unpleasant surprise next spring.
Don’t schools like Latin have alumni preference? Maybe OP’s school has something similar.
Anonymous wrote:I would like my kid to attend our IB for PK3. Many kids get waitlisted. Older sibling at charter. I prefer IB over charter but would like to have option of sibling preference if we don’t get in at IB. I figured best way is to list IB at #1 and charter at #2. Will I lose out on sibling if I don’t rank it #1? If so, would I just apply to charter after lottery as PK3 with sibling enrolled and move up the waitlist?
Thanks
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Will older child still be enrolled at the charter you're hoping to send the younger one to, though?
Some schools (IT for example) are PK-8. Others (Achievement Prep, Capital City) are actually separate schools for elementary and middle schools, though they share a campus. If your older child is in one of the latter types of schools, the younger child may not qualify for sibling preference at the elementary just because the older is enrolled at the middle school. Best to check with the school, and with MySchoolDC.
Yes, she will be enrolled at the school during lottery time. Thanks again.
Not sure that is the relevant question. While it's called a "sibling attending" preference the FAQ for MSDC says "If your child is admitted with a sibling preference, be prepared to prove that your children are siblings when you enroll them" (emphasis added). It kind of goes against the purpose of the preference to take a kid whose sibling will never attend school with them. But it wouldn't be the first nonsensical thing DC schools have done. I'd just check, and get the answer in writing, so you don't end up with an unpleasant surprise next spring.
Don’t schools like Latin have alumni preference? Maybe OP’s school has something similar.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Will older child still be enrolled at the charter you're hoping to send the younger one to, though?
Some schools (IT for example) are PK-8. Others (Achievement Prep, Capital City) are actually separate schools for elementary and middle schools, though they share a campus. If your older child is in one of the latter types of schools, the younger child may not qualify for sibling preference at the elementary just because the older is enrolled at the middle school. Best to check with the school, and with MySchoolDC.
Yes, she will be enrolled at the school during lottery time. Thanks again.
Not sure that is the relevant question. While it's called a "sibling attending" preference the FAQ for MSDC says "If your child is admitted with a sibling preference, be prepared to prove that your children are siblings when you enroll them" (emphasis added). It kind of goes against the purpose of the preference to take a kid whose sibling will never attend school with them. But it wouldn't be the first nonsensical thing DC schools have done. I'd just check, and get the answer in writing, so you don't end up with an unpleasant surprise next spring.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Will older child still be enrolled at the charter you're hoping to send the younger one to, though?
Some schools (IT for example) are PK-8. Others (Achievement Prep, Capital City) are actually separate schools for elementary and middle schools, though they share a campus. If your older child is in one of the latter types of schools, the younger child may not qualify for sibling preference at the elementary just because the older is enrolled at the middle school. Best to check with the school, and with MySchoolDC.
Yes, she will be enrolled at the school during lottery time. Thanks again.
Anonymous wrote:Will older child still be enrolled at the charter you're hoping to send the younger one to, though?
Some schools (IT for example) are PK-8. Others (Achievement Prep, Capital City) are actually separate schools for elementary and middle schools, though they share a campus. If your older child is in one of the latter types of schools, the younger child may not qualify for sibling preference at the elementary just because the older is enrolled at the middle school. Best to check with the school, and with MySchoolDC.
Anonymous wrote:If you list the IB #1, you will either match or be waitlisted. I don't think you would lose the sibling preference.
Do you want to move your older child to the IB?