Anonymous wrote:For those who say 'oh just keep doing what you're doing for another year', well that's fine and all but essentially by losing the lottery you're out about $15k. So maybe that's why OP is angry.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those who say 'oh just keep doing what you're doing for another year', well that's fine and all but essentially by losing the lottery you're out about $15k. So maybe that's why OP is angry.
As has been pointed out, there will be spots someplace in town. Maybe not in the dream school or the super-fine location.
Thems the breaks when you feel like you just cannot pay for childcare another year like every other middle class parent in every single other city must do.
Anonymous wrote:For those who say 'oh just keep doing what you're doing for another year', well that's fine and all but essentially by losing the lottery you're out about $15k. So maybe that's why OP is angry.
Anonymous wrote:There is always space in a PK3 program.... just not ones people find ideal...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The worst part for me about the lottery is that it pits neighbors against each other. That can only serve to break down community, not build it up. It does it at the citywide level too. It's a poisonous system.
Don't be ridiculous, if that's the type of animosity you have for someone else's good fortune, I would hate to be your neighbor. The government is not responsible for how you feel to about the people in your community that is your responsibility, granted you can be angry about the process.
Anonymous wrote:The worst part for me about the lottery is that it pits neighbors against each other. That can only serve to break down community, not build it up. It does it at the citywide level too. It's a poisonous system.
Anonymous wrote:I have lived in this city for 30 of my 36 years and my parents for a long time before that and we were shut out of every pk3 program we applied for. The shock has now turned to anger. I'm so disgusted with this process.it just burns me up that someone can just move into my neighborhood on a whim, work in VA or MD while I work for the city, and shut my DC out while I keep paying taxes for their DC to go to FREE pk. I'm so burned up over this.
I just had to get that off my chest.
A few questions:
1. Last year my understanding was that only a few in-boundary families got turned away from the in-boundary school. However, this year our waitlist number is enormous! How are there so many (30+) new children at my in-boundary school?
2. Does DCPS release a list of addresses in order of lottery number for a given school?
3. How do we track waitlist movement at a given school?
Anonymous wrote:The worst part for me about the lottery is that it pits neighbors against each other. That can only serve to break down community, not build it up. It does it at the citywide level too. It's a poisonous system.