Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Upper NW families "lotterying" into lower NW schools is only going to intensify as these schools drop PK classrooms to try to mitigate their overcrowding problems. In principle, you could remove their rights to enter the lottery elsewhere, but I doubt the city has any political appetite for that.
How on Earth would you even do that? Hey I know! Maybe you could draw a line around Ward 3 and announce every adult living there has to pay property taxes twice! Or, charge a $1000 annual surcharge to licensed drivers who also have a child in Key.
Or more analogously, make a rule that anyone living in Ward 3 cannot attend Deal unless they went all the way through J, L, or Mu. first and didn't attend private elementary school. Let's stick it to 'em!!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't most jklm do private preschool?
Yes, absolutely for age 3. I have never once met a person in my Murch boundary neighborhood who has cast about the city for a free spot in a DCPS for pk3.
For age four, I have met two household IB for Murch who sent their kids -- interestingly, both families had twins -- to Hearst for pk4. One of these families did this about 8 years ago, the other, more recently.
It's not a common thing in these parts, at all.
Fight by anecdote! I know several Upper NW families that used public schools for PK3, and many who sent their kids to other schools for PK4 because they couldn't get into their IB school. So by my limited experience it must be a very common thing!
Anonymous wrote:Upper NW families "lotterying" into lower NW schools is only going to intensify as these schools drop PK classrooms to try to mitigate their overcrowding problems. In principle, you could remove their rights to enter the lottery elsewhere, but I doubt the city has any political appetite for that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't most jklm do private preschool?
Yes, absolutely for age 3. I have never once met a person in my Murch boundary neighborhood who has cast about the city for a free spot in a DCPS for pk3.
For age four, I have met two household IB for Murch who sent their kids -- interestingly, both families had twins -- to Hearst for pk4. One of these families did this about 8 years ago, the other, more recently.
It's not a common thing in these parts, at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't most jklm do private preschool?
Yes, absolutely for age 3. I have never once met a person in my Murch boundary neighborhood who has cast about the city for a free spot in a DCPS for pk3.
For age four, I have met two household IB for Murch who sent their kids -- interestingly, both families had twins -- to Hearst for pk4. One of these families did this about 8 years ago, the other, more recently.
It's not a common thing in these parts, at all.
Anonymous wrote:Don't most jklm do private preschool?
Anonymous wrote:Op, I am confused. Are you asserting that the unprepared K kids result from IB students who don't get into ECE at their neighborhood schools? If they applied- they would beat out the OB kids, right? So the problem is that folks IB for your school don't want ECE. Your beef is not with OOB folks- but with your IB population.
This is exactly right. The OOB kids don't get in unless there are available slots after all the IB kids are placed. What OP really is arguing for is that her school's PS and PK classes remain under-enrolled rather that be filled with kids who are IB at JKLM. Which is, of course, ridiculous. She's also claiming that the presence is these children results in underprepared IB kindergarteners. Equally ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op, I am confused. Are you asserting that the unprepared K kids result from IB students who don't get into ECE at their neighborhood schools? If they applied- they would beat out the OB kids, right? So the problem is that folks IB for your school don't want ECE. Your beef is not with OOB folks- but with your IB population.
This is exactly right. The OOB kids don't get in unless there are available slots after all the IB kids are placed. What OP really is arguing for is that her school's PS and PK classes remain under-enrolled rather that be filled with kids who are IB at JKLM. Which is, of course, ridiculous. She's also claiming that the presence is these children results in underprepared IB kindergarteners. Equally ridiculous.
Yes, OP, what schools are you talking about anyway? And which is the school with 25 percent Oyster IB at PK?
Anonymous wrote:Op, I am confused. Are you asserting that the unprepared K kids result from IB students who don't get into ECE at their neighborhood schools? If they applied- they would beat out the OB kids, right? So the problem is that folks IB for your school don't want ECE. Your beef is not with OOB folks- but with your IB population.
This is exactly right. The OOB kids don't get in unless there are available slots after all the IB kids are placed. What OP really is arguing for is that her school's PS and PK classes remain under-enrolled rather that be filled with kids who are IB at JKLM. Which is, of course, ridiculous. She's also claiming that the presence is these children results in underprepared IB kindergarteners. Equally ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Op, I am confused. Are you asserting that the unprepared K kids result from IB students who don't get into ECE at their neighborhood schools? If they applied- they would beat out the OB kids, right? So the problem is that folks IB for your school don't want ECE. Your beef is not with OOB folks- but with your IB population.
This is exactly right. The OOB kids don't get in unless there are available slots after all the IB kids are placed. What OP really is arguing for is that her school's PS and PK classes remain under-enrolled rather that be filled with kids who are IB at JKLM. Which is, of course, ridiculous. She's also claiming that the presence is these children results in underprepared IB kindergarteners. Equally ridiculous.
Op, I am confused. Are you asserting that the unprepared K kids result from IB students who don't get into ECE at their neighborhood schools? If they applied- they would beat out the OB kids, right? So the problem is that folks IB for your school don't want ECE. Your beef is not with OOB folks- but with your IB population.