Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have had a child OOB, but I am curious why one would accept OOB in elementary if it necessitates trailers? Does that not mean the school is over capacity? Not sure why an OOB family would want that either?
There are a couple of reasons why a school with trailers would accept OOB, but here's one (simplified, streamlined) example. Say a school expects to end up with 40 in-bounds kid for 2nd grade but has only one 2nd grade classroom. They can't put all 40 2nd graders in a single 2nd grade classroom, so they arrange for trailers. But now they have two 2nd grade classrooms of 20 students, each of which could accept a few more kids (and more money with those kids to help offset the cost of those trailers. Obviously in reality it's much more complicated, but the number of IB kids don't always align with class sizes.
Anonymous wrote:I have had a child OOB, but I am curious why one would accept OOB in elementary if it necessitates trailers? Does that not mean the school is over capacity? Not sure why an OOB family would want that either?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Curious how this will affect the already-crowded Deal down the line. Unless these Hearst OOB kids were already in Deal feeders.
Not a particularly helpful or welcoming comment. OOB families are DC residents who also pay DC taxes and have every right to attend a DC public school where they were offered a slot through the DC public school lottery.
Anonymous wrote:Curious how this will affect the already-crowded Deal down the line. Unless these Hearst OOB kids were already in Deal feeders.
Anonymous wrote:Are the trailers back? That is a good sign in that it seems like a popular school then..,
Anonymous wrote:Am amazed at the number of OOB seats at Hearst this year. They must have lost a bunch of inboundary families because of the pandemic.