Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:CMI middle school has no waitlist.
They don't go past 6th, right? That's what N/A means (rather than a zero) for all the schools that don't offer a particular grade, I think. Seems reasonable that families don't want to join a school community for just one year, which happens to be their oldest year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:CMI middle school has no waitlist.
They don't go past 6th, right? That's what N/A means (rather than a zero) for all the schools that don't offer a particular grade, I think. Seems reasonable that families don't want to join a school community for just one year, which happens to be their oldest year.
Anonymous wrote:CMI middle school has no waitlist.
Anonymous wrote:The increase in demand at 5th and 6th grades is absolutely predicted and logical. It is the wide part of the bubble of all those students who enrolled in PK3 in their neighborhood elementary schools emboldened by the smaller wave of older neighborhood kids who jumped in around 2008/9.
That demand will only grow. What will happen?
Will the charter sector grow to meet the demand?
Will those families who don't get a spot through lottery turn to DCPS at Hardy or Brookland or Ward 6 middle schools?
Will those families go private or suburb?
Stay tuned
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These waitlists seem much shorter than in previous years. It looks like it was a good year to be a charter school entrant.
unless you're interested in 5th grade, where it's %165 higher![]()
it's not clear that the year over year is apples to apples. Of course the SY16-17 is going to be at its peak right now. Is the SY15-16 data from April 15 or is it current? >% 150 difference between years for 5th grade seems highly unlikely
I think it's time for you to wake up and smell the coffee . . . or at least talk to some families of 5th graders. And it's apples to apples - just look at last year's press release.
BASIS went from 18 to 141, Latin from 154 to to 266 . that's 233 spaces right there. That's your statistical difference.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These waitlists seem much shorter than in previous years. It looks like it was a good year to be a charter school entrant.
unless you're interested in 5th grade, where it's %165 higher![]()
it's not clear that the year over year is apples to apples. Of course the SY16-17 is going to be at its peak right now. Is the SY15-16 data from April 15 or is it current? >% 150 difference between years for 5th grade seems highly unlikely
I think it's time for you to wake up and smell the coffee . . . or at least talk to some families of 5th graders. And it's apples to apples - just look at last year's press release.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These waitlists seem much shorter than in previous years. It looks like it was a good year to be a charter school entrant.
unless you're interested in 5th grade, where it's %165 higher![]()
it's not clear that the year over year is apples to apples. Of course the SY16-17 is going to be at its peak right now. Is the SY15-16 data from April 15 or is it current? >% 150 difference between years for 5th grade seems highly unlikely
I think it's time for you to wake up and smell the coffee . . . or at least talk to some families of 5th graders. And it's apples to apples - just look at last year's press release.