Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is nothing wrong about wanting a better peer group for ones kids.
I mean, if you genuinely believe that the "peer group" is better at one school over another, you are very welcome to buy/rent in that school attendance zone. However, it is pretty gross to buy/rent in an economically diverse attendance zone and then claim that your own child is too special to go to school with the other children whose families can afford that neighborhood.
Not gross, hypocritical. Most people typically want nothing to do with the unwashed masses down stream.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is nothing wrong about wanting a better peer group for ones kids.
I mean, if you genuinely believe that the "peer group" is better at one school over another, you are very welcome to buy/rent in that school attendance zone. However, it is pretty gross to buy/rent in an economically diverse attendance zone and then claim that your own child is too special to go to school with the other children whose families can afford that neighborhood.
Anonymous wrote:There is nothing wrong about wanting a better peer group for ones kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is nothing wrong about wanting a better peer group for ones kids.
Exactly. Which is why we left the affluent private my kids used to go to. That peer group was unusually entitled, cliquish, and mean. They have a much better peer group in our middle class public.
Don’t assume richer = better peer group.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is nothing wrong about wanting a better peer group for ones kids.
Exactly. Which is why we left the affluent private my kids used to go to. That peer group was unusually entitled, cliquish, and mean. They have a much better peer group in our middle class public.
Don’t assume richer = better peer group.
Some of the W feeders have a horrible peer group in terms of spoiled, entitled kids with catty and/or racist parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is nothing wrong about wanting a better peer group for ones kids.
Exactly. Which is why we left the affluent private my kids used to go to. That peer group was unusually entitled, cliquish, and mean. They have a much better peer group in our middle class public.
Don’t assume richer = better peer group.
Anonymous wrote:There is nothing wrong about wanting a better peer group for ones kids.
Anonymous wrote:There is nothing wrong about wanting a better peer group for ones kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd bet money that the reason OP is spinning this hard has to do with the new school being somehow "worse" than the school where they have been renting.
MCPS is not entertained by folks who buy homes in economically diverse neighborhoods and then come up with elaborate reasons why their child cannot go to school with their neighbors' children.
But they are used to it. I see so many people who buy and count on CES, magnet or immersion and then freak out when their normal kids ends up in normal classes with normal (but poor) kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can’t you just keep your daughter at the same school and drive her? This is what happens in our school district when people move after they are registered and attend the school.
This is called residency cheating except under specific circumstances like eighth grade has already started.
Our schools do not seem to care if they continue in the school even though their address has changed. I'm not sure what the fraud is if they registered for a school with their address that was in district, then moved at some point, updated their new address, and continue at the school. No one has lied about anything.
Montgomery County Public Schools does not allow that. So, in order to keep her child in the school without a COSA, they'd need to lie and say they haven't moved. That's fraud.
If your district does things differently, then it's not fraud.
Ok and I'm sharing that the schools my kids have attended have not cared when their students have moved. Obviously I'm talking about MCPS as this is the MCPS forum. Again, I don't see what the fraud is. Perhaps a lack of enforcement of MCPS, but no fraud on the students/parents. They have not lied about anything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can’t you just keep your daughter at the same school and drive her? This is what happens in our school district when people move after they are registered and attend the school.
This is called residency cheating except under specific circumstances like eighth grade has already started.
Our schools do not seem to care if they continue in the school even though their address has changed. I'm not sure what the fraud is if they registered for a school with their address that was in district, then moved at some point, updated their new address, and continue at the school. No one has lied about anything.
Montgomery County Public Schools does not allow that. So, in order to keep her child in the school without a COSA, they'd need to lie and say they haven't moved. That's fraud.
If your district does things differently, then it's not fraud.
Ok and I'm sharing that the schools my kids have attended have not cared when their students have moved. Obviously I'm talking about MCPS as this is the MCPS forum. Again, I don't see what the fraud is. Perhaps a lack of enforcement of MCPS, but no fraud on the students/parents. They have not lied about anything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can’t you just keep your daughter at the same school and drive her? This is what happens in our school district when people move after they are registered and attend the school.
This is called residency cheating except under specific circumstances like eighth grade has already started.
Our schools do not seem to care if they continue in the school even though their address has changed. I'm not sure what the fraud is if they registered for a school with their address that was in district, then moved at some point, updated their new address, and continue at the school. No one has lied about anything.
Montgomery County Public Schools does not allow that. So, in order to keep her child in the school without a COSA, they'd need to lie and say they haven't moved. That's fraud.
If your district does things differently, then it's not fraud.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can’t you just keep your daughter at the same school and drive her? This is what happens in our school district when people move after they are registered and attend the school.
This is called residency cheating except under specific circumstances like eighth grade has already started.
Our schools do not seem to care if they continue in the school even though their address has changed. I'm not sure what the fraud is if they registered for a school with their address that was in district, then moved at some point, updated their new address, and continue at the school. No one has lied about anything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can’t you just keep your daughter at the same school and drive her? This is what happens in our school district when people move after they are registered and attend the school.
This is called residency cheating except under specific circumstances like eighth grade has already started.