Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sorry, didn’t meant to hit enter above. I think the real issue is that because of COVID, some OOB kids got into PK4 last year, which hadn’t been true the year before… so this year, there were only a handful of new IB Kers (new families only vs didn’t get into PK4) and they may have overestimated new IB interest when setting the initial targets.
I get what you are saying but that would not effect waitlist movement, only the initial lottery results. So yes, that might mean that some OOB families might have gotten spots in the lottery when in previous years they might not of (because those spots would be offered to IB families, of which there would normally be more because of people who'd gotten locked out of PK).
But waitlist movement can only be attributed to (1) people who got lottery spots choosing to turn them down or go elsewhere, or (2) already enrolled kids leaving. They didn't change the number of slots available for K between March and June, so that's can't be why the waitlist was moving fast in June.
Tell me you’re at a charter without telling me you’re at a charter. Of course schools with IBs change the number of slots available once they see how many IB kids enroll.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sorry, didn’t meant to hit enter above. I think the real issue is that because of COVID, some OOB kids got into PK4 last year, which hadn’t been true the year before… so this year, there were only a handful of new IB Kers (new families only vs didn’t get into PK4) and they may have overestimated new IB interest when setting the initial targets.
I get what you are saying but that would not effect waitlist movement, only the initial lottery results. So yes, that might mean that some OOB families might have gotten spots in the lottery when in previous years they might not of (because those spots would be offered to IB families, of which there would normally be more because of people who'd gotten locked out of PK).
But waitlist movement can only be attributed to (1) people who got lottery spots choosing to turn them down or go elsewhere, or (2) already enrolled kids leaving. They didn't change the number of slots available for K between March and June, so that's can't be why the waitlist was moving fast in June.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sorry, didn’t meant to hit enter above. I think the real issue is that because of COVID, some OOB kids got into PK4 last year, which hadn’t been true the year before… so this year, there were only a handful of new IB Kers (new families only vs didn’t get into PK4) and they may have overestimated new IB interest when setting the initial targets.
I get what you are saying but that would not effect waitlist movement, only the initial lottery results. So yes, that might mean that some OOB families might have gotten spots in the lottery when in previous years they might not of (because those spots would be offered to IB families, of which there would normally be more because of people who'd gotten locked out of PK).
But waitlist movement can only be attributed to (1) people who got lottery spots choosing to turn them down or go elsewhere, or (2) already enrolled kids leaving. They didn't change the number of slots available for K between March and June, so that's can't be why the waitlist was moving fast in June.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sorry, didn’t meant to hit enter above. I think the real issue is that because of COVID, some OOB kids got into PK4 last year, which hadn’t been true the year before… so this year, there were only a handful of new IB Kers (new families only vs didn’t get into PK4) and they may have overestimated new IB interest when setting the initial targets.
I get what you are saying but that would not effect waitlist movement, only the initial lottery results. So yes, that might mean that some OOB families might have gotten spots in the lottery when in previous years they might not of (because those spots would be offered to IB families, of which there would normally be more because of people who'd gotten locked out of PK).
But waitlist movement can only be attributed to (1) people who got lottery spots choosing to turn them down or go elsewhere, or (2) already enrolled kids leaving. They didn't change the number of slots available for K between March and June, so that's can't be why the waitlist was moving fast in June.
Anonymous wrote:Sorry, didn’t meant to hit enter above. I think the real issue is that because of COVID, some OOB kids got into PK4 last year, which hadn’t been true the year before… so this year, there were only a handful of new IB Kers (new families only vs didn’t get into PK4) and they may have overestimated new IB interest when setting the initial targets.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:K seems to be a weird grade across the city. Yes, it's an expansion year at many places, but there just don't seem to be enough kids. I wonder if it's a small class for pandemic-related reasons? For instance, on the Hill, Brent made 58 offers!
We have a K kid and it really varies. Anecdotally, I think a lot of families on the Hill moved and that impacted K lists at Brent and L-T (not sure about Maury). Like we just know a ton of families with K kids who left altogether. Lots of reasons, some related to the pandemic but some not. Honestly, some of it was just related to real estate decisions and people realizing that it was a make or break year for that (better to move before K than wait, plus lots of different pressures to sell or buy depending on your situation).
But we also sat on waitlists for several charters who expand their rosters a lot in K but just didn't move at all. We thought for sure we'd get a spot at ITS but after some movement in early August it's ground to a halt and now we probably won't. It really just depends.
Interesting. In my kid's K class at L-T, 17 of the 18 kids are back from PK4, so there doesn't seem to have been a ton of recent loss at least anecdotally.
That's surprising because we had a number in the low teens and wound up turning down an offered spot there back in June. Perhaps one of the other PK4 classes had more attrition? I was very surprised to get the offer and had we not been happy somewhere else at that point we would have jumped on it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:K seems to be a weird grade across the city. Yes, it's an expansion year at many places, but there just don't seem to be enough kids. I wonder if it's a small class for pandemic-related reasons? For instance, on the Hill, Brent made 58 offers!
We have a K kid and it really varies. Anecdotally, I think a lot of families on the Hill moved and that impacted K lists at Brent and L-T (not sure about Maury). Like we just know a ton of families with K kids who left altogether. Lots of reasons, some related to the pandemic but some not. Honestly, some of it was just related to real estate decisions and people realizing that it was a make or break year for that (better to move before K than wait, plus lots of different pressures to sell or buy depending on your situation).
But we also sat on waitlists for several charters who expand their rosters a lot in K but just didn't move at all. We thought for sure we'd get a spot at ITS but after some movement in early August it's ground to a halt and now we probably won't. It really just depends.
Interesting. In my kid's K class at L-T, 17 of the 18 kids are back from PK4, so there doesn't seem to have been a ton of recent loss at least anecdotally.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm on the DC PCSB site and the re-enrollment rate across both campuses is 89-90%. for MV
So why are they offering so many seats?
All other years they didn't offer seats at K-5, but offered many through waitlists. They likely better predicted what would be available based on past years. When the Lottery occurs, the schools have NO INFO on attrition. For the Cook campus offering 90 seats this past year -- the only year this happened -- this more likely shows opening a new classroom. MV Cook has 600+ students.
The point here is that people are saying there's so much attrition but the actual numbers don't bear that out.
I know a family whose younger child did NOT get into Calle8 at PK3. This also does not show increased attrition.
It just seems like MV is the punching bag right now, probably because a few families aren't happy, and takeover all these threads. It's OK to not like a school and leave. Don't have to bring it down.
MV is the punching bag right now. People here like to imagine that MV is failing. They can think whatever makes them feel better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm on the DC PCSB site and the re-enrollment rate across both campuses is 89-90%. for MV
So why are they offering so many seats?
All other years they didn't offer seats at K-5, but offered many through waitlists. They likely better predicted what would be available based on past years. When the Lottery occurs, the schools have NO INFO on attrition. For the Cook campus offering 90 seats this past year -- the only year this happened -- this more likely shows opening a new classroom. MV Cook has 600+ students.
The point here is that people are saying there's so much attrition but the actual numbers don't bear that out.
I know a family whose younger child did NOT get into Calle8 at PK3. This also does not show increased attrition.
It just seems like MV is the punching bag right now, probably because a few families aren't happy, and takeover all these threads. It's OK to not like a school and leave. Don't have to bring it down.
MV is the punching bag right now. People here like to imagine that MV is failing. They can think whatever makes them feel better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm on the DC PCSB site and the re-enrollment rate across both campuses is 89-90%. for MV
So why are they offering so many seats?
All other years they didn't offer seats at K-5, but offered many through waitlists. They likely better predicted what would be available based on past years. When the Lottery occurs, the schools have NO INFO on attrition. For the Cook campus offering 90 seats this past year -- the only year this happened -- this more likely shows opening a new classroom. MV Cook has 600+ students.
The point here is that people are saying there's so much attrition but the actual numbers don't bear that out.
I know a family whose younger child did NOT get into Calle8 at PK3. This also does not show increased attrition.
It just seems like MV is the punching bag right now, probably because a few families aren't happy, and takeover all these threads. It's OK to not like a school and leave. Don't have to bring it down.
Anonymous wrote:Does this data say anything about ITS?