Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why did you move your older kid the day before school started?
Because she was hoping nobody would notice.
That plan backfired. Now plan B is to talk about how cruel it would be to move Larlo after the school year already started.
OP is a crappy parent.
Anonymous wrote:To start I think everyone is over analyzing this as we did not know this policy from the start. I would be surprised that anyone did. To call me entitled is far fetched, you have no idea. Those throwing those comments are the ones that are more likely entitled. I never tried to beat a system I didnt know of. My oldest son got accepted two days before school started into a higher seeded lottery school. We were emailed by myschooldc for the lottery spot. We didnt plan for this. We had 1 day to decide and went forward with moving him to the other school. Can everyone honestly say they knew about this policy?
Anonymous wrote:OP, the system is working the way it should. You only moved your older child the day before school started in hopes of avoiding this by thinking they wouldn’t notice and you know it. There’s nothing to fight. Move along and play by the rules.
Anonymous wrote:
OP, we could have easily found ourselves in this situation this year. (I'm PP with the PS and 5th grader.) But yes, we did know about the preference for sibling enrolled policy and would have talked to the current school before making a decision and/or switch for the older. I presume your younger child will now have sib preference at the higher ranked school and you would like them both there? If thats the case, hang tight and that will easily happen before count day. Again, if you want your younger child to stay where they are, talk to admin face to face right away.
Anonymous wrote:
OP, we could have easily found ourselves in this situation this year. (I'm PP with the PS and 5th grader.) But yes, we did know about the preference for sibling enrolled policy and would have talked to the current school before making a decision and/or switch for the older. I presume your younger child will now have sib preference at the higher ranked school and you would like them both there? If thats the case, hang tight and that will easily happen before count day. Again, if you want your younger child to stay where they are, talk to admin face to face right away.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m guessing the scenario is you enrolled your older child in your wotp very desirable in boundary school and knew you could do it last minute since you have a right to go there. And since your IB doesn’t offer pk3 you wanted to use it free free at another school. Tough, lady.
And if this is what happened, shame on you, OP for doing that to your older child’s school. Springing a newly enrolled child on your inboundary school is how we get overcrowding. Your school wasn’t prepared for him and had to be added to an already set class at the last minute. That sucks for the teacher, your kid and everyone honestly. If your older child had gotten a last minute lottery spot you would have said that inYour OP. You were trying to be slick and beat the system.
Relax, the school will still get funding for said student.
Anonymous wrote:To start I think everyone is over analyzing this as we did not know this policy from the start. I would be surprised that anyone did. To call me entitled is far fetched, you have no idea. Those throwing those comments are the ones that are more likely entitled. I never tried to beat a system I didnt know of. My oldest son got accepted two days before school started into a higher seeded lottery school. We were emailed by myschooldc for the lottery spot. We didnt plan for this. We had 1 day to decide and went forward with moving him to the other school. Can everyone honestly say they knew about this policy?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m guessing the scenario is you enrolled your older child in your wotp very desirable in boundary school and knew you could do it last minute since you have a right to go there. And since your IB doesn’t offer pk3 you wanted to use it free free at another school. Tough, lady.
And if this is what happened, shame on you, OP for doing that to your older child’s school. Springing a newly enrolled child on your inboundary school is how we get overcrowding. Your school wasn’t prepared for him and had to be added to an already set class at the last minute. That sucks for the teacher, your kid and everyone honestly. If your older child had gotten a last minute lottery spot you would have said that inYour OP. You were trying to be slick and beat the system.
Relax, the school will still get funding for said student.
Anonymous wrote:Let's ease up on the OP re: enrolling in a new school one-day before school starts. There's no indication s/he's WOTP. For all we know it's for a charter and their number finally came up to the top of the list one day before school started. Happens all of the time and through count day...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m guessing the scenario is you enrolled your older child in your wotp very desirable in boundary school and knew you could do it last minute since you have a right to go there. And since your IB doesn’t offer pk3 you wanted to use it free free at another school. Tough, lady.
And if this is what happened, shame on you, OP for doing that to your older child’s school. Springing a newly enrolled child on your inboundary school is how we get overcrowding. Your school wasn’t prepared for him and had to be added to an already set class at the last minute. That sucks for the teacher, your kid and everyone honestly. If your older child had gotten a last minute lottery spot you would have said that inYour OP. You were trying to be slick and beat the system.