Anonymous wrote:For a lot of the 4/5-star schools, it's a crapshoot. It depends on how many IB K kids enroll. If the classes are full, they won't let anyone in. But sometimes if they get close enough to open another classroom, so they will take a few IB. There's no secret school that takes a lot of OOB students for K every year. It just depends on the demographics of the neighborhood that particular year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you have a decent lottery number and are willing to accept a spot after school starts you have a good chance at many DCPSs - including some of the 4/5 star schools.
Which ones? It’s not clear from the links above since all of DCPS is lumped together. Thanks!
From last year's data, these 4/5 star schools made at least 30 offers from their K waitlist by October - Brent, Hyde-Addison, Key, Lafayette, Stoddert
Many other 4/5 DCPS schools seem to make a few offers off the waitlist as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you have a decent lottery number and are willing to accept a spot after school starts you have a good chance at many DCPSs - including some of the 4/5 star schools.
Which ones? It’s not clear from the links above since all of DCPS is lumped together. Thanks!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At any school that has a larger K class than its PK4 class. Mundo Verde P St is an example of that. You can use the OSSE Enrollment Audit Data spreadsheet here to identify them. https://osse.dc.gov/page/2019-20-school-year-enrollment-audit-report-and-data
One reason the K lottery is easier is that schools are no longer subject to the PK4 class size cap of 20. They can go up to 24 quite comfortably, and over that if needed. So most schools need a modest net increase of kids. That adds some wiggle room into the whole system. K is also when people tend to move to the burbs, because that's when they can start school there. So there may be fewer applicants.
Thanks, but I don’t see any particularly stand out options. Anyone know of DCPS schools that have spots open up often enough to be worth listing?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you have a decent lottery number and are willing to accept a spot after school starts you have a good chance at many DCPSs - including some of the 4/5 star schools.
Which ones? It’s not clear from the links above since all of DCPS is lumped together. Thanks!
Anonymous wrote:If you have a decent lottery number and are willing to accept a spot after school starts you have a good chance at many DCPSs - including some of the 4/5 star schools.
Anonymous wrote:At any school that has a larger K class than its PK4 class. Mundo Verde P St is an example of that. You can use the OSSE Enrollment Audit Data spreadsheet here to identify them. https://osse.dc.gov/page/2019-20-school-year-enrollment-audit-report-and-data
One reason the K lottery is easier is that schools are no longer subject to the PK4 class size cap of 20. They can go up to 24 quite comfortably, and over that if needed. So most schools need a modest net increase of kids. That adds some wiggle room into the whole system. K is also when people tend to move to the burbs, because that's when they can start school there. So there may be fewer applicants.
Anonymous wrote:We're in an okay charter, but would like to find a longer term option by kindergarten or first grade. I keep hearing that the lottery gets easier starting in kindergarten. What schools should we be considering that may have been a long shot for pre-k? We speak Spanish at home, though aren't dominate, so would be comfortable starting immersion in first or second grade.