Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ITS did not move its wait list for several weeks over the summer ... I wonder if they are trying to manipulate their WL to create a more stable cohort.
It may not violate the specific rules of the system, but it does seem to be drifting away from its intent
Not gonna work.
--Underwhelmed mom whose kid was admitted in early Oct.
Could you share more about your experience? Why underwhelmed?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ITS did not move its wait list for several weeks over the summer ... I wonder if they are trying to manipulate their WL to create a more stable cohort.
It may not violate the specific rules of the system, but it does seem to be drifting away from its intent
Not gonna work.
--Underwhelmed mom whose kid was admitted in early Oct.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP: if your second kid matches at another school that you prefer, even with sibling weighting at ITS,, why would it be ITS’s responsibility to take your kid ahead of another family who ranked it higher (in the first round!)? I would imagine that, unless your older is in a grade where the other school rarely accepts kids, your odds are as good that your older kid will get pulled in as for any sibling preference at the other school.
Almost every other school is fine with it. What's special about ITS?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If DC2 gets into a school other than ITS, wouldn't DC1 be #1/super high on that school's waitlist? (That's how it works for twins.) Are you worried because this other school doesn't generally accept students at DC1's grade?
I get the feeling that schools generally try to make sure siblings are at the same school, but I could be wrong.
Yes, DC1 would be high, but maybe not high enough. If it's Yu Ying or Stokes.
Unless there is another family who has a kid match and is trying to get a sibling into the same grade as DC1, I feel like even YY or Stokes could make it work because DC1 would be #1 on the waitlist. But I guess it's not a sure thing. If I were in OP's position, I'd probably just rank ITS #1 for DC2. Because in the alternative, even if DC2 gets a good draw and matches with another school, it's just going to cause stress about getting DC1 in.
Anonymous wrote:OP: if your second kid matches at another school that you prefer, even with sibling weighting at ITS,, why would it be ITS’s responsibility to take your kid ahead of another family who ranked it higher (in the first round!)? I would imagine that, unless your older is in a grade where the other school rarely accepts kids, your odds are as good that your older kid will get pulled in as for any sibling preference at the other school.
Anonymous wrote:That feels really sneaky and disingenuous. I'm sure ITS is tired of losing people to language schools, but they also need to stop moving their waitlist only in August.
To me "committed" families is coded language for higher SES.[quote]
This hasn’t been our experience at the school. I’m sorry if it has been yours. I do think it’s weird and annoying to not have moved their list until so late but it seems like this year was worse on that front (anecdotally from what I can remember) so maybe it was a one-off. I think the more families express concern about it to the school directly instead of here, the better chance there is for improvement.
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone know if this a new thing more schools adopted or something unique to Inspired Teaching? Do other schools handle sibling preference and waitlists the same way?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ITS did not move its wait list for several weeks over the summer ... I wonder if they are trying to manipulate their WL to create a more stable cohort.
It may not violate the specific rules of the system, but it does seem to be drifting away from its intent
Not gonna work.
--Underwhelmed mom whose kid was admitted in early Oct.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I emailed MySchoolDC and they called back in just a few minutes! I was amazed.
They said if DC2 matches somewhere she ranked higher, she loses sibling preference at ITS and can not add it back as a sibling. Bummer.
MySchoolDC is an example of how the newly created government orgs are much better run than the old school agencies (who will never ever ever answer the phone or call back).
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I emailed MySchoolDC and they called back in just a few minutes! I was amazed.
They said if DC2 matches somewhere she ranked higher, she loses sibling preference at ITS and can not add it back as a sibling. Bummer.