Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m confused how people falsify records. You need two forms to prove residency, unless you have a pay stub. It’s not that easy to do. Practically, how do people falsify these forms?
Depends on your job. I could go into my self-service ADP portal at work and change my address now, and leave it that way for the next 6-8 weeks for enrollment, and then change it back.
The article listed other scenarios -- renting an apartment or room in District; claiming your child lives at the address of a friend or relative (have your name on their utility bill).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:List of the other schools where the 111 cases of fraud were found (schools outside DC are private schools where DC places special-ed students):
https://twitter.com/maustermuhle/status/994995297658040320
Wow... Brent.
Anonymous wrote:List of the other schools where the 111 cases of fraud were found (schools outside DC are private schools where DC places special-ed students):
https://twitter.com/maustermuhle/status/994995297658040320
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How sad that there aren't enough talented students in DC to fill up this school. So many DCPS high schools have enrollments the size of smaller elementary schools in other jurisdictions.
Let in every DC kid who wants to attend until the school is full or you run out of DC residents. Any excess capacity can be filled by out of District residents who audition. It’s DC public school. Virginia and Maryland can build their own.
Anonymous wrote:How sad that there aren't enough talented students in DC to fill up this school. So many DCPS high schools have enrollments the size of smaller elementary schools in other jurisdictions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd like to know how they did this investigation of the entire student body, and why they can't replicate it at other schools. I expect that Ellington's fraud is larger than other schools, due to its history and specialty, but doing the full scrub at a few other schools would either shine a light on the problem or put the questions to bed.
+1 ; however - I've asked this before and will ask again; if OSSE has run this Audit yearly, and never found similar findings until the AG got involved, how can we trust them to do a deeper clean?
Anonymous wrote:They will NEVER kick these kids out. I would be completely shocked if they did. The kids will stay pending further investigations that will go on for years. I just think this is the way Ellington has been since it was founded. Heck Dave Chapelke talks about living in Silver Spring and attending Ellington in his comedy routines!
Anonymous wrote:I'd like to know how they did this investigation of the entire student body, and why they can't replicate it at other schools. I expect that Ellington's fraud is larger than other schools, due to its history and specialty, but doing the full scrub at a few other schools would either shine a light on the problem or put the questions to bed.
Anonymous wrote:How sad that there aren't enough talented students in DC to fill up this school. So many DCPS high schools have enrollments the size of smaller elementary schools in other jurisdictions.