As school options multiply, families across the country face a more complicated process to choose, apply, and enroll in public schools.
Some schools may offer preferences for residents of certain neighborhoods, others may have special admissions requirements, and others may provide specialized programming — and they all may have different applications and deadlines.
Navigating a variety of school types, processes and timelines can be an overwhelming task for families and a serious barrier to school choice.
To simplify the process for families, several cities across the country are unifying their enrollment systems. Examples range from creating a single application or a common application process amongst schools to implementing a full “unified enrollment” system.
Cities with a common, single application process allow families to apply to multiple schools through a single submission of an application. All schools participating in the process share a timeline and application.
Sometimes, the single application system is for applying to one type of school, such as to the city’s charter schools.
Other times, a single application will be for applying to different types of schools across the city, such as to the city’s district and charter schools.
A single application does not always feed into a shared lottery, but creating a single application is often a first step toward a “unified enrollment” system.
Cities with a unified enrollment (UE) system use a transparent set of policies to allocate public school seats (both charter and district) to students through a single application and student assignment process (including a lottery when necessary) for all participating schools.
Typically, in a UE system, applicants rank their preferred schools in order — naming which school is their first choice, their second choice, and so on. The matching process, or lottery, typically provides each applicant with only one offer to the highest-ranked school on their list which has space for them.
In addition to streamlining the process for families, here are a few additional reasons a city might adopt a UE system:
For cities or organizations contemplating unifying their enrollment processes, online enrollment management systems can dramatically improve efficiency, accuracy, and equity in this process.