Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yea, I don’t see how OP is going to pull this together and have appropriate documentation because she doesn’t even live in the city.
Do you actually have to show all the paperwork when you accept?
Yes, you must show you live in bounds to register as an inbounds student and you must show you live somewhere in DC to register for out of bounds, boundary free, or charter schools.
Yeah that is not my question. My question is whether you have to show all the paperwork when you accept, or just before the first day of school.
To enroll / register - you need to show paperwork that you are a resident.
To go to school - you need to show paperwork that you have the required dental / medical items completed.
In my experience - the charters / application HS did not differentiate "accepting" the lottery spot and enrolling.
Same here, at DCPS. I don't think there's a difference between accepting and enrolling in DC schools. They're the same. Enrolling is how you accept.
The distinction is that -
not everyone who enrolls need to "accept" lottery spot -
but everyone who accepts lottery spot does so through enrollment
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yea, I don’t see how OP is going to pull this together and have appropriate documentation because she doesn’t even live in the city.
Do you actually have to show all the paperwork when you accept?
Yes, you must show you live in bounds to register as an inbounds student and you must show you live somewhere in DC to register for out of bounds, boundary free, or charter schools.
Yeah that is not my question. My question is whether you have to show all the paperwork when you accept, or just before the first day of school.
To enroll / register - you need to show paperwork that you are a resident.
To go to school - you need to show paperwork that you have the required dental / medical items completed.
In my experience - the charters / application HS did not differentiate "accepting" the lottery spot and enrolling.
Same here, at DCPS. I don't think there's a difference between accepting and enrolling in DC schools. They're the same. Enrolling is how you accept.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yea, I don’t see how OP is going to pull this together and have appropriate documentation because she doesn’t even live in the city.
Do you actually have to show all the paperwork when you accept?
Yes, you must show you live in bounds to register as an inbounds student and you must show you live somewhere in DC to register for out of bounds, boundary free, or charter schools.
Yeah that is not my question. My question is whether you have to show all the paperwork when you accept, or just before the first day of school.
To enroll / register - you need to show paperwork that you are a resident.
To go to school - you need to show paperwork that you have the required dental / medical items completed.
In my experience - the charters / application HS did not differentiate "accepting" the lottery spot and enrolling.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yea, I don’t see how OP is going to pull this together and have appropriate documentation because she doesn’t even live in the city.
Do you actually have to show all the paperwork when you accept?
Yes, you must show you live in bounds to register as an inbounds student and you must show you live somewhere in DC to register for out of bounds, boundary free, or charter schools.
Yeah that is not my question. My question is whether you have to show all the paperwork when you accept, or just before the first day of school.
To enroll / register - you need to show paperwork that you are a resident.
To go to school - you need to show paperwork that you have the required dental / medical items completed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yea, I don’t see how OP is going to pull this together and have appropriate documentation because she doesn’t even live in the city.
Do you actually have to show all the paperwork when you accept?
Yes, you must show you live in bounds to register as an inbounds student and you must show you live somewhere in DC to register for out of bounds, boundary free, or charter schools.
Yeah that is not my question. My question is whether you have to show all the paperwork when you accept, or just before the first day of school.
To enroll / register - you need to show paperwork that you are a resident.
To go to school - you need to show paperwork that you have the required dental / medical items complated.
Yeah but you forgot “accept.” I believe that there are some schools that will require the residency proof to accept the spot, but that doesn’t mean they all do. Some schools allow you to accept first and do the paperwork later.
FWIW I stopped turning in medical forms years ago in DCPS and nobody ever said anything. I don’t think I ever did a dental form.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yea, I don’t see how OP is going to pull this together and have appropriate documentation because she doesn’t even live in the city.
Do you actually have to show all the paperwork when you accept?
Yes, you must show you live in bounds to register as an inbounds student and you must show you live somewhere in DC to register for out of bounds, boundary free, or charter schools.
Yeah that is not my question. My question is whether you have to show all the paperwork when you accept, or just before the first day of school.
To enroll / register - you need to show paperwork that you are a resident.
To go to school - you need to show paperwork that you have the required dental / medical items complated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yea, I don’t see how OP is going to pull this together and have appropriate documentation because she doesn’t even live in the city.
Do you actually have to show all the paperwork when you accept?
Yes, you must show you live in bounds to register as an inbounds student and you must show you live somewhere in DC to register for out of bounds, boundary free, or charter schools.
Yeah that is not my question. My question is whether you have to show all the paperwork when you accept, or just before the first day of school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yea, I don’t see how OP is going to pull this together and have appropriate documentation because she doesn’t even live in the city.
Do you actually have to show all the paperwork when you accept?
Yes, you must show you live in bounds to register as an inbounds student and you must show you live somewhere in DC to register for out of bounds, boundary free, or charter schools.
Yeah that is not my question. My question is whether you have to show all the paperwork when you accept, or just before the first day of school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know how it works, but you can pay to attend DC schools if you don't live in DC.
Not sure if that applies in this situation where you just pay for the first year until you secure residence.
Residents get priority. You can't pay for a school unless it has slots. That you plan to move to DC would not affect that.
OP says they were given a slot even though they were clear they don't live in DC. Doesn't that mean the school has slots?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yea, I don’t see how OP is going to pull this together and have appropriate documentation because she doesn’t even live in the city.
Do you actually have to show all the paperwork when you accept?
Yes, you must show you live in bounds to register as an inbounds student and you must show you live somewhere in DC to register for out of bounds, boundary free, or charter schools.
Anonymous wrote:OP here: Wow - ok. I thought we just needed to secure a lease by this date and could send all other types of proof in before day 1 of school. Sounds like there's no way we will be able to do this.