Anonymous wrote:And, even if the total number of students initially identified were not all cheaters, their paperwork was dodgy enough to raise concerns, which overall indicates the registrar at Ellington is not doing due diligence. Just because those families proved residence, doesn’t mean the paperwork was proper up front.
Anonymous wrote:And, even if the total number of students initially identified were not all cheaters, their paperwork was dodgy enough to raise concerns, which overall indicates the registrar at Ellington is not doing due diligence. Just because those families proved residence, doesn’t mean the paperwork was proper up front.
Anonymous wrote:33 confirmed cheaters is still way too much cheating, no matter how much OSSE got it wrong initially. Someone was negligent to let that many families get away with it and it cost DC tons in taxpayer dollars to foot the bill for however many years for each kid, not to mention the untold numbers of cheaters before them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But again the bar for proving residency is pretty low and as I understand this process the bar was not raised in the questionable cases here. Which doesn't say much about the efforts that 15% of families who apparently decided they'd been caught and didn't try to come up with a DC based utility bill.
Also 15% of the high number of cases turning out to be fraudulent is still a lot of students cheating - if you have similar numbers of students at Deal and Wilson cheating you are talking about a lot of students. (And I get that it is not 15% of the total student body that was caught)
15% of the 219 accused is 33 confirmed non-residents.
An additional 40-ish students still appear to have residency unconfirmed - my guess is that many of these students will ultimately clear the low residency bar but probably didn't/don't really live in DC.
OSSE did mess up. But 75 cases of almost certain residency fraud at a 520-student school is still a big deal.
Anonymous wrote:But again the bar for proving residency is pretty low and as I understand this process the bar was not raised in the questionable cases here. Which doesn't say much about the efforts that 15% of families who apparently decided they'd been caught and didn't try to come up with a DC based utility bill.
Also 15% of the high number of cases turning out to be fraudulent is still a lot of students cheating - if you have similar numbers of students at Deal and Wilson cheating you are talking about a lot of students. (And I get that it is not 15% of the total student body that was caught)