Inquirer reporter Miriam Hill spoke with Lipkin, who works in information technology, about his search and the site:
Question: How did you come up with the idea for "Philly School Search"?
Lipkin: When I started the process of looking for schools, probably somewhere around when my son was 3, I was kind of overwhelmed by it and was trying to understand things like voluntary transfers. [These transfers allow Philadelphia School District parents to apply to send their children to district schools outside their own attendance areas.]
In Philly, you might go to an elementary school, and then you might go to a magnet middle school, and then you might switch up again in high school.
I just figured I'd write down what I was doing.
Q: How many visitors does your blog have now?
Lipkin: I started in December 2009. By March 2010, the site had 4,100 page views per month; by March 2011, 10,000 page views per month.
I wrote a couple of posts about Masterman and the Independence Charter lottery, and I think those probably started coming up in Google searches.
Q: How do you decide what to write about?
Lipkin: The bottom line is that most of the things I end up writing about are things I'm thinking about. If I had a diary, it might look like exactly what I'm writing about.
I'm not interviewing principals. I'm not making special visits to schools that go beyond where my own personal school choice would take me. The only thing I have done for the sake of the blog that I may not have done for myself was to go to one of the charter school lotteries to see what that's like firsthand.
[Of the lottery to get into Independence, a coveted charter, Lipkin wrote: "It was dead silent. Parents' faces showed anxiety and sadness, but nobody spoke except for school officials, who were clearly heartbroken themselves."]