Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:G,
Welcome to dcum where almost everyone is rude as hell for no reason. I’m sorry you have already been attacked for no reason.
Also, don’t listen to most of these posters. If you strategize you CAN indeed get into a good diverse school. I just moved to dc and this is my first year in the lottery for my daughter who is attending Yu Ying. A good school that is diverse is what I was hoping for, and it worked out. Someone has to get into these good schools and your chances are just as good as anyone else’s.
My strategy was to really do thorough research, choose around 8 schools that I really felt very comfortable with, 2-3 safety schools that I would feel comfortable with my daughter going to just in case, then to list my inbound school last. Remember early education is usually pretty good everywhere, so you’ll have some time if you don’t get the best number next year. You can also participate in Lamb’s lottery and they tend to go pretty deep into their prek3 waitlists.
Don’t stress it because you’ll be fine. And please only take what some of these posters here on dcum say with a grain of salt. Many of them are miserable who purposely steer people in the wrong direction. Good luck
Thanks for the warm welcome, LOL. If possible, please tell me where you did your research. I'm not sure if the information that I am finding is accurate.
Anonymous wrote:G,
Welcome to dcum where almost everyone is rude as hell for no reason. I’m sorry you have already been attacked for no reason.
Also, don’t listen to most of these posters. If you strategize you CAN indeed get into a good diverse school. I just moved to dc and this is my first year in the lottery for my daughter who is attending Yu Ying. A good school that is diverse is what I was hoping for, and it worked out. Someone has to get into these good schools and your chances are just as good as anyone else’s.
My strategy was to really do thorough research, choose around 8 schools that I really felt very comfortable with, 2-3 safety schools that I would feel comfortable with my daughter going to just in case, then to list my inbound school last. Remember early education is usually pretty good everywhere, so you’ll have some time if you don’t get the best number next year. You can also participate in Lamb’s lottery and they tend to go pretty deep into their prek3 waitlists.
Don’t stress it because you’ll be fine. And please only take what some of these posters here on dcum say with a grain of salt. Many of them are miserable who purposely steer people in the wrong direction. Good luck
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:G,
Welcome to dcum where almost everyone is rude as hell for no reason. I’m sorry you have already been attacked for no reason.
Also, don’t listen to most of these posters. If you strategize you CAN indeed get into a good diverse school. I just moved to dc and this is my first year in the lottery for my daughter who is attending Yu Ying. A good school that is diverse is what I was hoping for, and it worked out. Someone has to get into these good schools and your chances are just as good as anyone else’s.
My strategy was to really do thorough research, choose around 8 schools that I really felt very comfortable with, 2-3 safety schools that I would feel comfortable with my daughter going to just in case, then to list my inbound school last. Remember early education is usually pretty good everywhere, so you’ll have some time if you don’t get the best number next year. You can also participate in Lamb’s lottery and they tend to go pretty deep into their prek3 waitlists.
Don’t stress it because you’ll be fine. And please only take what some of these posters here on dcum say with a grain of salt. Many of them are miserable who purposely steer people in the wrong direction. Good luck
You were fortunate in the lottery. The chances of OP getting all of her wants in the lottery are slim. Those are just the numbers. If she doesn't put her IB on the list - and that's her floor, getting in anywhere will be a long-shot.
Also, OP wasn't attacked for no reason but because of her unrealistic expectations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:G,
Welcome to dcum where almost everyone is rude as hell for no reason. I’m sorry you have already been attacked for no reason.
Also, don’t listen to most of these posters. If you strategize you CAN indeed get into a good diverse school. I just moved to dc and this is my first year in the lottery for my daughter who is attending Yu Ying. A good school that is diverse is what I was hoping for, and it worked out. Someone has to get into these good schools and your chances are just as good as anyone else’s.
My strategy was to really do thorough research, choose around 8 schools that I really felt very comfortable with, 2-3 safety schools that I would feel comfortable with my daughter going to just in case, then to list my inbound school last. Remember early education is usually pretty good everywhere, so you’ll have some time if you don’t get the best number next year. You can also participate in Lamb’s lottery and they tend to go pretty deep into their prek3 waitlists.
Don’t stress it because you’ll be fine. And please only take what some of these posters here on dcum say with a grain of salt. Many of them are miserable who purposely steer people in the wrong direction. Good luck
You were fortunate in the lottery. The chances of OP getting all of her wants in the lottery are slim. Those are just the numbers. If she doesn't put her IB on the list - and that's her floor, getting in anywhere will be a long-shot.
Also, OP wasn't attacked for no reason but because of her unrealistic expectations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I still want OP to come back here and defend her decision not to use the same schools as her neighbors. What is so bad about the neighborhood where she chose to live and raise a family that she cannot even consider sending her child to school with the children in the neighborhood?
To be fair, a lot of the problems with DCPS are because of the adults, not the kids. If someone is not happy with the faculty or leadership, that is an okay reason to me.
I'd agree if by adults you meant the parents. You can't place the primary blame on the staff at the low performing schools, most of whom are working very hard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I still want OP to come back here and defend her decision not to use the same schools as her neighbors. What is so bad about the neighborhood where she chose to live and raise a family that she cannot even consider sending her child to school with the children in the neighborhood?
To be fair, a lot of the problems with DCPS are because of the adults, not the kids. If someone is not happy with the faculty or leadership, that is an okay reason to me.
I'd agree if by adults you meant the parents. You can't place the primary blame on the staff at the low performing schools, most of whom are working very hard.
Anonymous wrote:G,
Welcome to dcum where almost everyone is rude as hell for no reason. I’m sorry you have already been attacked for no reason.
Also, don’t listen to most of these posters. If you strategize you CAN indeed get into a good diverse school. I just moved to dc and this is my first year in the lottery for my daughter who is attending Yu Ying. A good school that is diverse is what I was hoping for, and it worked out. Someone has to get into these good schools and your chances are just as good as anyone else’s.
My strategy was to really do thorough research, choose around 8 schools that I really felt very comfortable with, 2-3 safety schools that I would feel comfortable with my daughter going to just in case, then to list my inbound school last. Remember early education is usually pretty good everywhere, so you’ll have some time if you don’t get the best number next year. You can also participate in Lamb’s lottery and they tend to go pretty deep into their prek3 waitlists.
Don’t stress it because you’ll be fine. And please only take what some of these posters here on dcum say with a grain of salt. Many of them are miserable who purposely steer people in the wrong direction. Good luck
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I still want OP to come back here and defend her decision not to use the same schools as her neighbors. What is so bad about the neighborhood where she chose to live and raise a family that she cannot even consider sending her child to school with the children in the neighborhood?
To be fair, a lot of the problems with DCPS are because of the adults, not the kids. If someone is not happy with the faculty or leadership, that is an okay reason to me.
Anonymous wrote:G,
Welcome to dcum where almost everyone is rude as hell for no reason. I’m sorry you have already been attacked for no reason.
Also, don’t listen to most of these posters. If you strategize you CAN indeed get into a good diverse school. I just moved to dc and this is my first year in the lottery for my daughter who is attending Yu Ying. A good school that is diverse is what I was hoping for, and it worked out. Someone has to get into these good schools and your chances are just as good as anyone else’s.
My strategy was to really do thorough research, choose around 8 schools that I really felt very comfortable with, 2-3 safety schools that I would feel comfortable with my daughter going to just in case, then to list my inbound school last. Remember early education is usually pretty good everywhere, so you’ll have some time if you don’t get the best number next year. You can also participate in Lamb’s lottery and they tend to go pretty deep into their prek3 waitlists.
Don’t stress it because you’ll be fine. And please only take what some of these posters here on dcum say with a grain of salt. Many of them are miserable who purposely steer people in the wrong direction. Good luck
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I still want OP to come back here and defend her decision not to use the same schools as her neighbors. What is so bad about the neighborhood where she chose to live and raise a family that she cannot even consider sending her child to school with the children in the neighborhood?
Defend. LOL.
More than 50 percent of students in the city have parents who have made the same choice. OP worded it in a way that is easy to pick on in a way that I know you wouldn't have the courage to do to many of the families that have reached the same conclusion.
This is incorrect. 50% of parents have chosen a charter rather than the IB school, but only a (much smaller?) subset of parents would not send their children to the IB under any circumstances, as the OP is suggesting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I still want OP to come back here and defend her decision not to use the same schools as her neighbors. What is so bad about the neighborhood where she chose to live and raise a family that she cannot even consider sending her child to school with the children in the neighborhood?
Defend. LOL.
More than 50 percent of students in the city have parents who have made the same choice. OP worded it in a way that is easy to pick on in a way that I know you wouldn't have the courage to do to many of the families that have reached the same conclusion.
OP admits she's having "severe anxiety" over where her child will attend preschool, has a list of demands that are very difficult to meet, and what appears to be a shortlist of only a handful of highly popular schools that she'll consider. OF COURSE she's getting picked on. She wants something she cannot afford, and that at least 75% of the parents on this board cannot afford, which is an easy, convenient, sure bet of a free preschool.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I still want OP to come back here and defend her decision not to use the same schools as her neighbors. What is so bad about the neighborhood where she chose to live and raise a family that she cannot even consider sending her child to school with the children in the neighborhood?
Defend. LOL.
More than 50 percent of students in the city have parents who have made the same choice. OP worded it in a way that is easy to pick on in a way that I know you wouldn't have the courage to do to many of the families that have reached the same conclusion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I still want OP to come back here and defend her decision not to use the same schools as her neighbors. What is so bad about the neighborhood where she chose to live and raise a family that she cannot even consider sending her child to school with the children in the neighborhood?
Defend. LOL.
More than 50 percent of students in the city have parents who have made the same choice. OP worded it in a way that is easy to pick on in a way that I know you wouldn't have the courage to do to many of the families that have reached the same conclusion.