Anonymous wrote:It is simply an example of how they have run things in the past. Basically disregard the rules. I wouldn't expect that to change anytime soon.
Anonymous wrote:It is simply an example of how they have run things in the past. Basically disregard the rules. I wouldn't expect that to change anytime soon.
Anonymous wrote:Let's be clear. EVERY school in the lottery manages their own waitlists once they leave Central. Every. Single. School.
Anonymous wrote:^^they still do...
Anonymous wrote:Yes indeed. Since it's start 20 years ago SWS has been a specialized school and not citywide. It had boundaries. SWS did not leave the cluster school to become a citywide school. It left the cluster to grow into a pk3 - 5th full elementary school. Parents during the split from the cluster were led to believe it would become a neighborhood school somewhere around Capitol Hill. The citywide came as a surprise and a compromise to be able to move into the particular building we got. Nothing about a specialized program means it has to be citywide.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why should the feed be on the Hill? It is a citywide school.
This is pretty clearly trolling, but I'll answer as if it's not.
They've done a study and something like 90% of the student body is on the Hill. Most of the families currently have a by-rights feed to Stuart-Hobson, although whether that survives the boundary re-draw remains to be seen.
The LSAT has released principles to guide the discussion, based on a working group and school survey. They would like to have a feed, that fits with the R-E curriculum. There is no request for a feed to a specific school or program.
To answer the OP's question - yes, it is definitely being discussed.