Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do other schools have these caps?
Is there a way to find out what they are?
Every non-public school does.
They all do but I believe it's up to the local ANC to enforce it. It's not something that gets audited (to a person) each year.
It appears that schools are given grace unless they 1)grossly exceed the agreed upon enrollment AND/OR 2)tick off the neighbors enough that they really complain
The ANC can monitor and report but ANCs really have no power. They are advisory.
But yes, behavior by the school community as described above will get you negative attention. As it should.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has anyone heard of other schools having fewer spots? If so, which ones? It seems like many schools are still accepting late applications (for second round). I would think if they had less spots, they wouldn't be accepting late applications.
You mean Sidwell? I thought they always accepted late applications.
Anonymous wrote:Has anyone heard of other schools having fewer spots? If so, which ones? It seems like many schools are still accepting late applications (for second round). I would think if they had less spots, they wouldn't be accepting late applications.
Anonymous wrote:this is the reality of living in a city. mixed use. maybe instead there should be vehicle restrictions like other schools (potomac and field come to mind) rather than on enrollment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do other schools have these caps?
Is there a way to find out what they are?
Every non-public school does.
They all do but I believe it's up to the local ANC to enforce it. It's not something that gets audited (to a person) each year.
It appears that schools are given grace unless they 1)grossly exceed the agreed upon enrollment AND/OR 2)tick off the neighbors enough that they really complain
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do other schools have these caps?
Is there a way to find out what they are?
Every non-public school does.
Anonymous wrote:GDS should plan to have a typical sized 9th grade class (whatever that number was pre-covid) because you need the athletes and the super smart kids and connected kids to ensure college placement / reputation says strong. Obviously you plan for much higher yield and accept fewer students and make more use of the waitlist.
For the other grades you accept siblings and any stand outs / children of DC royalty that you need to accept and that's it. Maybe a few extras to make sure you have at least 12 in pre-k and 2 small kindergarten classes. You can always back fill the classes in future years.
Anonymous wrote:Has anyone heard of other schools having fewer spots? If so, which ones? It seems like many schools are still accepting late applications (for second round). I would think if they had less spots, they wouldn't be accepting late applications.
Anonymous wrote:Gds is approximately 50 students over their enrollment cap.
Anonymous wrote:Do other schools have these caps?
Is there a way to find out what they are?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The city probably cut them some slack over Covid. But now things are getting back to normal, including full-time in-person school with GDS parents and family staff dropping kids off all over the surrounding neighborhood in violation of the school’s agreement, they are requiring the school to comply
It’s not normal or business as usual. Applicants multiplied, acceptance yields spiked and open private schools in the dmv blew out their numbers.
We were shocked how various communities here handled Covid and didn’t put children first, but here we go again. More of the same. What a community.
We have families in other states that had significantly more hours per week of in person school than here those days, in public and private schools. Parents working remotely even subbed in various classes. Can do attitude and made it happen.
Here people were zooming in to teach kids a couple hours a day and staying home. Politicians trying to shut any type of school down.
Anonymous wrote:If they're over their enrollment cap, can they admit any kids?
I'm confused.
The class of 2025 is huge at GDS and other privates as well. That was the first Covid year. I think NCS corrected last year by limiting acceptances to the class of 2026. It effect may drag on for a few more years.
I wonder if the city audited the numbers at GDS which led to this email. If that is the case, I bet they audited the rest too.
Anonymous wrote:this is the reality of living in a city. mixed use. maybe instead there should be vehicle restrictions like other schools (potomac and field come to mind) rather than on enrollment.