College attendance data - report your school results

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:

Wow. Just a handful of Ivies for such a large and affluent school. That’s surprising.



Compared to what?


Compared to good public HSs in the NE.



Provide data to back up that claim. Otherwise you’re just peddling in stereotypes.


DP, but Ivy League schools are mostly in the NE (and the rest are no further south than Philadelphia), there are more Ivy League alumni in the NE, the state schools are not on par with UVA and W&M, and there are no suburban STEM magnets comparable to TJ. It figures that a higher percentage of students at schools in, say, Summit, NJ or Newton, MA will end up at Ivy League schools.
Anonymous
Any Montgomery county school results?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:^ is it brain drain to TJ? They should show results by home school.


Why? The four years spent at TJ in a specialized cirriculum and a wholly different cohort of kids is so different.


But it would explain why there are fewer top schools for the other affluent high schools.


Of course it would be a fun exercise, but that science experiment would have so problems with it, too many variables are different for the TJ/base school student.


It’s really not that complicated to create a list. ??


Because going to TJ changes the calculus in terms of workload and GPA and curriculum and skill set. Just graduating from TJ is a huge accomplishment. I have one kid at TJ, and one at Chantilly. So unlike many people on this board, I can directly compare. The DC at TJ iliterally put in twice the outside of school work for a lower freshman GPA. (I can only compare freshman year right now). Workload and expectations wise TJ isn’t “just another FCPS high school”. It isn’t just the specialized classes. It’s how much more they expect of kids— in Biology (TJ teaches out of the AP book at AP level in 9th). Math (TJ compresses A2 and pre-Calc into 3 semesters, and adds in additional materials), the extra classes (including design tech and the stupid robot), the senior research lab my older DC is about to start, the three years of summer schlol my TJ kid did. The sheer number of projects,labs and lab reports, etc. the years of homework until 1 am.

My TJ kid is the older one, and will graduate having acquired the research and writing skills yes u would expect of a college grad from a good SLAC. College visits were eye opening, because DC has already acquired much of their research and writing curriculum.

Chantilly kid is rising sophomore, so I’d like to see the curriculum for the next couple of years. But I believe they will graduate from Chantilly prepared to succeed at a top college— where they will need to acquire the research and writing skills the TJ kid already has.

My kids have tested as IQs within 2 points of each other. Both had 4.0s in MS out of Carson AAP. Both did similar activities. Both had similar math entrance exam schores, althouth the TJ kid did better in reading. Chantilly kid is actually better with executive functioning and more hardcore STEM with a real passion vs my “I like everything p” TJ kid. . From where I sit entrance was a craps shoot— TJ saw something in one kids recs and SIS that they did not in the other. And I think that if they were rally looking for demonstrated STEM passion, they chose the wrong kid.

Both my kids will likely end up at the same college (WM or VT Science for one, Engineering for the other— neither are fans of UVA). Unless they get merit aid, we can’t afford OOS or private. But they will not enter college on the same footing. TJ kid will just be better prepared. Chantilly kid will have to work a lot harder.

What you are asking is like taking all the top private school kids and reporting their colleges with McLean. The HS you attend, the academic rigor, the peer group you have are a big part of where you get into college and how you do once you get there. You know this. Or you would have spent less money and bought into Lee or Mt. Vernon.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:^ is it brain drain to TJ? They should show results by home school.


Why? The four years spent at TJ in a specialized cirriculum and a wholly different cohort of kids is so different.


But it would explain why there are fewer top schools for the other affluent high schools.


Of course it would be a fun exercise, but that science experiment would have so problems with it, too many variables are different for the TJ/base school student.


It’s really not that complicated to create a list. ??


Because going to TJ changes the calculus in terms of workload and GPA and curriculum and skill set. Just graduating from TJ is a huge accomplishment. I have one kid at TJ, and one at Chantilly. So unlike many people on this board, I can directly compare. The DC at TJ iliterally put in twice the outside of school work for a lower freshman GPA. (I can only compare freshman year right now). Workload and expectations wise TJ isn’t “just another FCPS high school”. It isn’t just the specialized classes. It’s how much more they expect of kids— in Biology (TJ teaches out of the AP book at AP level in 9th). Math (TJ compresses A2 and pre-Calc into 3 semesters, and adds in additional materials), the extra classes (including design tech and the stupid robot), the senior research lab my older DC is about to start, the three years of summer schlol my TJ kid did. The sheer number of projects,labs and lab reports, etc. the years of homework until 1 am.

My TJ kid is the older one, and will graduate having acquired the research and writing skills yes u would expect of a college grad from a good SLAC. College visits were eye opening, because DC has already acquired much of their research and writing curriculum.

Chantilly kid is rising sophomore, so I’d like to see the curriculum for the next couple of years. But I believe they will graduate from Chantilly prepared to succeed at a top college— where they will need to acquire the research and writing skills the TJ kid already has.

My kids have tested as IQs within 2 points of each other. Both had 4.0s in MS out of Carson AAP. Both did similar activities. Both had similar math entrance exam schores, althouth the TJ kid did better in reading. Chantilly kid is actually better with executive functioning and more hardcore STEM with a real passion vs my “I like everything p” TJ kid. . From where I sit entrance was a craps shoot— TJ saw something in one kids recs and SIS that they did not in the other. And I think that if they were rally looking for demonstrated STEM passion, they chose the wrong kid.

Both my kids will likely end up at the same college (WM or VT Science for one, Engineering for the other— neither are fans of UVA). Unless they get merit aid, we can’t afford OOS or private. But they will not enter college on the same footing. TJ kid will just be better prepared. Chantilly kid will have to work a lot harder.

What you are asking is like taking all the top private school kids and reporting their colleges with McLean. The HS you attend, the academic rigor, the peer group you have are a big part of where you get into college and how you do once you get there. You know this. Or you would have spent less money and bought into Lee or Mt. Vernon.


Sounds like your kids aren’t going to top schools either way.

SES plays the biggest factor in academic success anyway.




Anonymous
Interesting. TJ Naviance up:

Applied/Admitted/Attending

VT. 243/182/22. (A lot of the applications are for Engineering). 75% Admit rate

WM: 168/144/27. 86% admit rate. (Wow!)

UVA: 349/197/83. 57% admit rate

UVC: 99/96/6 (lots of Health Sciences kids)

Pitt: 110/108/25 (this is the TJ STEM safety school and they are known to give merit aid to any TJ kid who will come)

Michigan: 135/62/15 (46%)

GA Tech: 106/31/12 (36%)

Cornell: 151/26/15. (17%)

CMU: 148/41/14. (28%)

^^^^^

Schools with a lot of traction at TJ



Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:^ is it brain drain to TJ? They should show results by home school.


Why? The four years spent at TJ in a specialized cirriculum and a wholly different cohort of kids is so different.


But it would explain why there are fewer top schools for the other affluent high schools.


Of course it would be a fun exercise, but that science experiment would have so problems with it, too many variables are different for the TJ/base school student.


It’s really not that complicated to create a list. ??


Because going to TJ changes the calculus in terms of workload and GPA and curriculum and skill set. Just graduating from TJ is a huge accomplishment. I have one kid at TJ, and one at Chantilly. So unlike many people on this board, I can directly compare. The DC at TJ iliterally put in twice the outside of school work for a lower freshman GPA. (I can only compare freshman year right now). Workload and expectations wise TJ isn’t “just another FCPS high school”. It isn’t just the specialized classes. It’s how much more they expect of kids— in Biology (TJ teaches out of the AP book at AP level in 9th). Math (TJ compresses A2 and pre-Calc into 3 semesters, and adds in additional materials), the extra classes (including design tech and the stupid robot), the senior research lab my older DC is about to start, the three years of summer schlol my TJ kid did. The sheer number of projects,labs and lab reports, etc. the years of homework until 1 am.

My TJ kid is the older one, and will graduate having acquired the research and writing skills yes u would expect of a college grad from a good SLAC. College visits were eye opening, because DC has already acquired much of their research and writing curriculum.

Chantilly kid is rising sophomore, so I’d like to see the curriculum for the next couple of years. But I believe they will graduate from Chantilly prepared to succeed at a top college— where they will need to acquire the research and writing skills the TJ kid already has.

My kids have tested as IQs within 2 points of each other. Both had 4.0s in MS out of Carson AAP. Both did similar activities. Both had similar math entrance exam schores, althouth the TJ kid did better in reading. Chantilly kid is actually better with executive functioning and more hardcore STEM with a real passion vs my “I like everything p” TJ kid. . From where I sit entrance was a craps shoot— TJ saw something in one kids recs and SIS that they did not in the other. And I think that if they were rally looking for demonstrated STEM passion, they chose the wrong kid.

Both my kids will likely end up at the same college (WM or VT Science for one, Engineering for the other— neither are fans of UVA). Unless they get merit aid, we can’t afford OOS or private. But they will not enter college on the same footing. TJ kid will just be better prepared. Chantilly kid will have to work a lot harder.

What you are asking is like taking all the top private school kids and reporting their colleges with McLean. The HS you attend, the academic rigor, the peer group you have are a big part of where you get into college and how you do once you get there. You know this. Or you would have spent less money and bought into Lee or Mt. Vernon.


Sounds like your kids aren’t going to top schools either way.

SES plays the biggest factor in academic success anyway.






In my mind, WM and VT engineering are top schools. At a cost that lets us also help for grad school, if need be. You do well,at one of these schools, you can go to any grad school in the country. And what most people care about in hiring is your terminal degree.

But, I guess if you live in a NOVA bubble and can drop $300,000 on an undergrad education, WM and VT are second rate. It must be nice to have the money to be that snobby about a WM or VT Engineering education.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:^ is it brain drain to TJ? They should show results by home school.


Why? The four years spent at TJ in a specialized cirriculum and a wholly different cohort of kids is so different.


But it would explain why there are fewer top schools for the other affluent high schools.


Of course it would be a fun exercise, but that science experiment would have so problems with it, too many variables are different for the TJ/base school student.


It’s really not that complicated to create a list. ??


Because going to TJ changes the calculus in terms of workload and GPA and curriculum and skill set. Just graduating from TJ is a huge accomplishment. I have one kid at TJ, and one at Chantilly. So unlike many people on this board, I can directly compare. The DC at TJ iliterally put in twice the outside of school work for a lower freshman GPA. (I can only compare freshman year right now). Workload and expectations wise TJ isn’t “just another FCPS high school”. It isn’t just the specialized classes. It’s how much more they expect of kids— in Biology (TJ teaches out of the AP book at AP level in 9th). Math (TJ compresses A2 and pre-Calc into 3 semesters, and adds in additional materials), the extra classes (including design tech and the stupid robot), the senior research lab my older DC is about to start, the three years of summer schlol my TJ kid did. The sheer number of projects,labs and lab reports, etc. the years of homework until 1 am.

My TJ kid is the older one, and will graduate having acquired the research and writing skills yes u would expect of a college grad from a good SLAC. College visits were eye opening, because DC has already acquired much of their research and writing curriculum.

Chantilly kid is rising sophomore, so I’d like to see the curriculum for the next couple of years. But I believe they will graduate from Chantilly prepared to succeed at a top college— where they will need to acquire the research and writing skills the TJ kid already has.

My kids have tested as IQs within 2 points of each other. Both had 4.0s in MS out of Carson AAP. Both did similar activities. Both had similar math entrance exam schores, althouth the TJ kid did better in reading. Chantilly kid is actually better with executive functioning and more hardcore STEM with a real passion vs my “I like everything p” TJ kid. . From where I sit entrance was a craps shoot— TJ saw something in one kids recs and SIS that they did not in the other. And I think that if they were rally looking for demonstrated STEM passion, they chose the wrong kid.

Both my kids will likely end up at the same college (WM or VT Science for one, Engineering for the other— neither are fans of UVA). Unless they get merit aid, we can’t afford OOS or private. But they will not enter college on the same footing. TJ kid will just be better prepared. Chantilly kid will have to work a lot harder.

What you are asking is like taking all the top private school kids and reporting their colleges with McLean. The HS you attend, the academic rigor, the peer group you have are a big part of where you get into college and how you do once you get there. You know this. Or you would have spent less money and bought into Lee or Mt. Vernon.


Sounds like your kids aren’t going to top schools either way.

SES plays the biggest factor in academic success anyway.






In my mind, WM and VT engineering are top schools. At a cost that lets us also help for grad school, if need be. You do well,at one of these schools, you can go to any grad school in the country. And what most people care about in hiring is your terminal degree.

But, I guess if you live in a NOVA bubble and can drop $300,000 on an undergrad education, WM and VT are second rate. It must be nice to have the money to be that snobby about a WM or VT Engineering education.


C'mon, don't exaggerate. It'll only be around $200,000. And W&M is a top school in my opinion; unfortunately I couldn't convince DC to go there.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:^ is it brain drain to TJ? They should show results by home school.


Why? The four years spent at TJ in a specialized cirriculum and a wholly different cohort of kids is so different.


But it would explain why there are fewer top schools for the other affluent high schools.


Of course it would be a fun exercise, but that science experiment would have so problems with it, too many variables are different for the TJ/base school student.


It’s really not that complicated to create a list. ??


Because going to TJ changes the calculus in terms of workload and GPA and curriculum and skill set. Just graduating from TJ is a huge accomplishment. I have one kid at TJ, and one at Chantilly. So unlike many people on this board, I can directly compare. The DC at TJ iliterally put in twice the outside of school work for a lower freshman GPA. (I can only compare freshman year right now). Workload and expectations wise TJ isn’t “just another FCPS high school”. It isn’t just the specialized classes. It’s how much more they expect of kids— in Biology (TJ teaches out of the AP book at AP level in 9th). Math (TJ compresses A2 and pre-Calc into 3 semesters, and adds in additional materials), the extra classes (including design tech and the stupid robot), the senior research lab my older DC is about to start, the three years of summer schlol my TJ kid did. The sheer number of projects,labs and lab reports, etc. the years of homework until 1 am.

My TJ kid is the older one, and will graduate having acquired the research and writing skills yes u would expect of a college grad from a good SLAC. College visits were eye opening, because DC has already acquired much of their research and writing curriculum.

Chantilly kid is rising sophomore, so I’d like to see the curriculum for the next couple of years. But I believe they will graduate from Chantilly prepared to succeed at a top college— where they will need to acquire the research and writing skills the TJ kid already has.

My kids have tested as IQs within 2 points of each other. Both had 4.0s in MS out of Carson AAP. Both did similar activities. Both had similar math entrance exam schores, althouth the TJ kid did better in reading. Chantilly kid is actually better with executive functioning and more hardcore STEM with a real passion vs my “I like everything p” TJ kid. . From where I sit entrance was a craps shoot— TJ saw something in one kids recs and SIS that they did not in the other. And I think that if they were rally looking for demonstrated STEM passion, they chose the wrong kid.

Both my kids will likely end up at the same college (WM or VT Science for one, Engineering for the other— neither are fans of UVA). Unless they get merit aid, we can’t afford OOS or private. But they will not enter college on the same footing. TJ kid will just be better prepared. Chantilly kid will have to work a lot harder.

What you are asking is like taking all the top private school kids and reporting their colleges with McLean. The HS you attend, the academic rigor, the peer group you have are a big part of where you get into college and how you do once you get there. You know this. Or you would have spent less money and bought into Lee or Mt. Vernon.


Sounds like your kids aren’t going to top schools either way.

SES plays the biggest factor in academic success anyway.






In my mind, WM and VT engineering are top schools. At a cost that lets us also help for grad school, if need be. You do well,at one of these schools, you can go to any grad school in the country. And what most people care about in hiring is your terminal degree.

But, I guess if you live in a NOVA bubble and can drop $300,000 on an undergrad education, WM and VT are second rate. It must be nice to have the money to be that snobby about a WM or VT Engineering education.


C'mon, don't exaggerate. It'll only be around $200,000. And W&M is a top school in my opinion; unfortunately I couldn't convince DC to go there.



Williams incoming class: $71k/ year. Will be $284k for incoming class, before tuition hikes. No merit aid.

Stanford: $71,500/year. Ditto.

Amherst incoming class: $76-78/k a year. X 4years. >300k. No merit aid.

And we are a solidly donut hole family. It would be great if my kids could apply to these schools. Here in the real word of budgets they can’t. And they are not allowed to take out loans for undergrad. They are almost certainly looking at grad school.

At this point, we are thankful that we have enough saved to put 2 kids through WM ($34k next year). Lots of kids go to Ivy or aivy caliber grad schools from WM (or VT Engineering). That’s what my kids are going to have to do.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Interesting. TJ Naviance up:

Applied/Admitted/Attending

VT. 243/182/22. (A lot of the applications are for Engineering). 75% Admit rate

WM: 168/144/27. 86% admit rate. (Wow!)

UVA: 349/197/83. 57% admit rate

UVC: 99/96/6 (lots of Health Sciences kids)

Pitt: 110/108/25 (this is the TJ STEM safety school and they are known to give merit aid to any TJ kid who will come)

Michigan: 135/62/15 (46%)

GA Tech: 106/31/12 (36%)

Cornell: 151/26/15. (17%)

CMU: 148/41/14. (28%)

^^^^^

Schools with a lot of traction at TJ

MIT?



Anonymous
TJ MIT: 91/13/10 (14%)

Most years, TJ sends more kids to MIT than any other HS. But you will never see huge numbers.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Yorktown HS, selected colleges:

UVA - 25
W&M - 5
VA Tech - 18
JMU - 23
VCU - 18
GMU - 13
CNU - 11
UMW - 5
NVCC - 24

Bowdoin - 1
CMU - 1
Carleton - 1
Chicago - 2
Colgate - 2
Duke - 1
Emory - 3
Georgetown - 2
UCLA - 1
MIT - 1
Michigan - 2
Northwestern - 3
Penn - 2
Pomona - 1
Richmond - 2
Stanford - 1
Swarthmore - 1
Tufts - 1
Tulane - 3
West Point - 1
Vassar - 2
Wash & Lee - 1
Wash U - 1
Wesleyan - 1



Is this based on a subset of students who shared information? Only two heading to the Ivy League, and both to the same school - Penn???
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Any Montgomery county school results?

Bump
Anonymous
Interesting to see the number actually attending various institutions, thank you.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Any Montgomery county school results?

Bump

Whitman HS

UMD 65
Montgomery College 20
Gap Year 13
Michigan 12
PSU 11
Georgia 8
Indiana 7
Tulane 7
VT 7
Wisconsin 7
Colorado 6
Undecided 6
Georgetown 5
Salisbury 5
South Carolina 5
USC 5
Vermont 5
Elon 4
GWU 4
Miami 4
Miami Ohio 4
NYU 4
Pitt 4
Rochester 4
St. Mary's of MD 4
Syracuse 4
Tufts 4
UVA 4
Yale 4
Emory 3
Ithaca 3
Johns Hopkins 3
Northeastern 3
Rutgers 3
San Diego 3
Towson 3
UC-Davis 3
UCLA 3
UMBC 3
UNC-Wilmington 3
Washington 3
Washington University 3
Wellesley 3
American 2
Arizona State 2
Barnard 2
BC 2
Boston 2
Bowdoin 2
Brown 2
Carnegie Mellon 2
Case Western 2
Charles III U of Madrid 2
Colgate 2
College of Charleston 2
Columbia 2
Cornell 2
Dartmouth 2
Dickinson 2
Duke 2
Florida 2
George Mason 2
Lehigh 2
Mount St. Mary's 2
Northwestern 2
Notre Dame 2
Oxford 2
Princeton 2
Richmond 2
RPI 2
UC-Berkeley 2
Uconn 2
UMASS-Amherst 2
UNC-Chapel Hill 2
Wake Forest 2
York of PA 2
Alabama 1
Alfred 1
Arizona 1
Army 1
Art Inst of Chicago 1
Bates 1
Belmont 1
Berklee 1
Boston Architectural 1
Boston U 1
Bowie State 1
Brandeis 1
Bristol 1
British Columbia 1
Butler 1
BYU 1
Cal-San Diego 1
Champlain 1
Chicago 1
Christian U 1
Cincinnati 1
Clark 1
College of Wooster 1
Colorado State 1
Coventry U 1
Davidson 1
Depaul 1
Drexel 1
Duoc 1
East Angila 1
Ecole Poly 1
Ekerd 1
Fairfield 1
Fordham 1
Francisco de Vitoria 1
Franklin and Marshall 1
Goucher 1
Harvard 1
Harvey Mudd 1
Haverford 1
HEC Montreal 1
Hill School 1
Howard 1
Internship 1
Japan 1
JMU 1
Junior Hockey 1
Kentucky 1
King's College 1
Leiden 1
Loyola Marymount 1
Macalester 1
Maine 1
Maryland Institute of Art 1
Marymount 1
Middle Tenn State 1
Minnesota 1
Montana State 1
Monterrey 1
Montreal 1
Muhlenberg 1
NC State 1
New School of Drama 1
Oberlin 1
Occidental 1
Oregon 1
Pace 1
Pacific College 1
Penn 1
Portugal 1
Providence 1
PSU-Harrisburg 1
Purdue 1
Return to Spain 1
Rice 1
Riverview 1
Rollins 1
Salamanca 1
San Diego State 1
SCAD 1
Scripps 1
Seton Hall 1
Shippensburg 1
Skidmore 1
St. Joe's 1
Stockholm 1
Susquehanna 1
Taft School 1
Taking A Levels 1
Tampa 1
Toronto 1
Transition Training 1
Tutfs 1
UC-Santa Barbara 1
UC-Santa Cruz 1
Vanderbilt 1
Vassar 1
Villanova 1
Washington and Lee 1
Wesleyan 1
West England 1
William & Mary 1
Working 1
MIT 0
Stanford 0
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Any Montgomery county school results?

Bump

Whitman HS

UMD 65
Montgomery College 20
Gap Year 13
Michigan 12
PSU 11
Georgia 8
Indiana 7
Tulane 7
VT 7
Wisconsin 7
Colorado 6
Undecided 6
Georgetown 5
Salisbury 5
South Carolina 5
USC 5
Vermont 5
Elon 4
GWU 4
Miami 4
Miami Ohio 4
NYU 4
Pitt 4
Rochester 4
St. Mary's of MD 4
Syracuse 4
Tufts 4
UVA 4
Yale 4
Emory 3
Ithaca 3
Johns Hopkins 3
Northeastern 3
Rutgers 3
San Diego 3
Towson 3
UC-Davis 3
UCLA 3
UMBC 3
UNC-Wilmington 3
Washington 3
Washington University 3
Wellesley 3
American 2
Arizona State 2
Barnard 2
BC 2
Boston 2
Bowdoin 2
Brown 2
Carnegie Mellon 2
Case Western 2
Charles III U of Madrid 2
Colgate 2
College of Charleston 2
Columbia 2
Cornell 2
Dartmouth 2
Dickinson 2
Duke 2
Florida 2
George Mason 2
Lehigh 2
Mount St. Mary's 2
Northwestern 2
Notre Dame 2
Oxford 2
Princeton 2
Richmond 2
RPI 2
UC-Berkeley 2
Uconn 2
UMASS-Amherst 2
UNC-Chapel Hill 2
Wake Forest 2
York of PA 2
Alabama 1
Alfred 1
Arizona 1
Army 1
Art Inst of Chicago 1
Bates 1
Belmont 1
Berklee 1
Boston Architectural 1
Boston U 1
Bowie State 1
Brandeis 1
Bristol 1
British Columbia 1
Butler 1
BYU 1
Cal-San Diego 1
Champlain 1
Chicago 1
Christian U 1
Cincinnati 1
Clark 1
College of Wooster 1
Colorado State 1
Coventry U 1
Davidson 1
Depaul 1
Drexel 1
Duoc 1
East Angila 1
Ecole Poly 1
Ekerd 1
Fairfield 1
Fordham 1
Francisco de Vitoria 1
Franklin and Marshall 1
Goucher 1
Harvard 1
Harvey Mudd 1
Haverford 1
HEC Montreal 1
Hill School 1
Howard 1
Internship 1
Japan 1
JMU 1
Junior Hockey 1
Kentucky 1
King's College 1
Leiden 1
Loyola Marymount 1
Macalester 1
Maine 1
Maryland Institute of Art 1
Marymount 1
Middle Tenn State 1
Minnesota 1
Montana State 1
Monterrey 1
Montreal 1
Muhlenberg 1
NC State 1
New School of Drama 1
Oberlin 1
Occidental 1
Oregon 1
Pace 1
Pacific College 1
Penn 1
Portugal 1
Providence 1
PSU-Harrisburg 1
Purdue 1
Return to Spain 1
Rice 1
Riverview 1
Rollins 1
Salamanca 1
San Diego State 1
SCAD 1
Scripps 1
Seton Hall 1
Shippensburg 1
Skidmore 1
St. Joe's 1
Stockholm 1
Susquehanna 1
Taft School 1
Taking A Levels 1
Tampa 1
Toronto 1
Transition Training 1
Tutfs 1
UC-Santa Barbara 1
UC-Santa Cruz 1
Vanderbilt 1
Vassar 1
Villanova 1
Washington and Lee 1
Wesleyan 1
West England 1
William & Mary 1
Working 1
MIT 0
Stanford 0


Impressive. Better than NOVA base schools reported here in terms of college placement.
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