public kindergarten application and moving after the application deadline

By Joyce Szuflita
I find that families get very agitated about missing the kindergarten application, particularly if they are moving. (By the way, we don’t have information on when the deadline in 2022 is yet).
Here are a couple of facts:

  • Everyone has a zoned school.

  • You have the right to attend kindergarten and whether you make the k application deadline or not, you will have a k placement very very very likely in your zoned school.

Think of the kindergarten application as a kind of census that the City takes of five year olds. The DoE hopes that every five year old in the City should fill out an application. It is the first time they know how many k kids are out there and what zones have the potential to be over or under capacity. The application is easy after you register for an account on the application platform MY SCHOOLS. The DoE will make every effort to put you in your zoned school, unless you don’t like your zoned school and then they have a protocol in place for you to apply to up to 12 programs in your order of preference, so that they can try and place you in a school that you prefer. It is your most robust chance to get a seat at a school outside of your zone, but depending on the schools involved it may or may not be likely.

There are sibling priorities, and geographic priorities associated with zones and districts and you can read a lot about the algorithm and priorities on the City’s website as well as in other blogs on this website.

Where you live affects the school you are zoned for and perhaps other surrounding schools for which you might have a district priority. If you are moving after the application deadline, the City expects you to fill it out according to your current NYC address and notify them later about your new address. That is not a problem. If you know your new address and are moving very shortly after the application, then go ahead and use the new address, but generally the DoE doesn’t like future, prospective information. It can make things complicated.

You do not fill out a new application after the deadline. You just contact your new zoned school, let them know about your new status and they will arrange a time for you to pre-register. The big fear for families is that there will not be seats in their zoned school, but that fear is GREATLY exaggerated. Of the 65,000 kindergarteners last year, only 70 applied for zoned schools that were overcapacity and had difficulty in getting a placement in their schools at the time of the initial placements. My guess is that many, if not all of them, actually got a seat in their zoned schools by the beginning of kindergarten as things sorted out in the spring. If you are worried about overcapacity in your zoned school before a move, keep in touch with the Parent Coordinator at the future school. They WILL NOT save a seat for you or leverage a placement, but they can give you information about the schools history of accepting zoned families in the spring and summer as well as information about registering for the school when you have your proofs of address.

Moving? You need to read the Chancellor's Regulations

Moving? You need to read the Chancellor's Regulations

By Joyce Szuflita
From time to time, the Chancellor's Regulations are adjusted, and they make for pretty interesting reading (at least to me). I am interested mainly in Volume A which addresses student-related issues, from admissions to promotion. Issues covered range from safety, behavior and discipline, flea markets, transportation and naming public schools.

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