Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP indicated she will move if offered a spot. She and her child will be DC residents. No cheating involved.
If she moves to DC by enrollment of course it's fine. Just skeptical they will REALLY do this.
Anonymous wrote:OP indicated she will move if offered a spot. She and her child will be DC residents. No cheating involved.
Anonymous wrote:OP indicated she will move if offered a spot. She and her child will be DC residents. No cheating involved.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To answer OPs question, yes you may enter the lottery while residing outside the district. Upon acceptance and enrollment you just provide proof of residency. I personally know of three families who did at YY. Actually, the Washington Post did a story on one of the parents who moved his family from Chicago once his son was offered a spot off the wait list. I know of another family that sold their home in Upper Marlboro and rented a house in DC until they found something to purchase two years later. I would think there are other stories out there like that.
The question is: what address did the Chicago family use to apply? Did they tell the truth on the app, or use a DC addy and move quickly when they got in? And what year was this?
Bottom line: beware lying on your form. If your kid doesn't go home to and sleep at your application address most nights of the week/month/year, you risk getting booted. And DEFINITELY by enrollment time that's true. Simple as that. And believe it - almost all cheaters who get caught and booted thought they'd never get caught.
Anonymous wrote:At our sought after charter, residency cheats get thrown out immediately. There was a child in my DC's K class who basically was gone during the middle of the school term. Very sweet girl, had attended preK at the school too. Found out they lived in MD and got caught. This happened after count day so her spot was not filled from the long waitlist. Lose lose for everyone.
Anonymous wrote:To answer OPs question, yes you may enter the lottery while residing outside the district. Upon acceptance and enrollment you just provide proof of residency. I personally know of three families who did at YY. Actually, the Washington Post did a story on one of the parents who moved his family from Chicago once his son was offered a spot off the wait list. I know of another family that sold their home in Upper Marlboro and rented a house in DC until they found something to purchase two years later. I would think there are other stories out there like that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And, non-residents can attend if they pay the tuition cost.
But you have to get in first!! There are thousands who live in DC who don't get in.
But there are also tens of thousands who did get into charters - including some out-of-state residents at charters paying tuition. Luck of the draw.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And, non-residents can attend if they pay the tuition cost.
But you have to get in first!! There are thousands who live in DC who don't get in.
But there are also tens of thousands who did get into charters - including some out-of-state residents at charters paying tuition. Luck of the draw.
Anonymous wrote:OP, are you sincere in saying you'd move back to your DC rental unit? Dubious. Please know that DC residents are fed up with interlopers from across our borders and are happy to turn you in now that there is a hotline where tips can be supplied anonymously. So, yes, you can apply without living in DC but when enrollment is finalized you better be able to prove it and do so without coaching your child on lying about where he/she lives.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And, non-residents can attend if they pay the tuition cost.
But you have to get in first!! There are thousands who live in DC who don't get in.