That will be a good thing for the county. On the sports front, I think Madison, Oakton and Woodson likely have earned more state sports championships than TJ. Being good at tennis and swim/dive in a weak division only get you so far. |
So what ![]() TJ isn't a sports school. What is the point of all those sports trophies anyway. American kids play way too much sports and way too little of STEM, that is why there is a shortage of engineering graduates that needs to be imported from elsewhere. |
Well of course they do really well. Many TJ kids are among the strongest students in the pyramids they were drawn from. Some of them are extraordinary students. You concentrate them all in one place and drain the pools they were drawn from and they're bound to do much better on average than most other excellent schools, and certainly much better than the other high schools in the district. However, although they place close to the top in most cases, I'm not sure you can call their performance a "sweep." Look at SO for instance: https://scioly.org/wiki/index.php/National_Tournament_Winners There are lots of schools that aren't even magnets that consistently do much better than TJ at a lot of competitions. Mira Loma is one example. It's not a function of some TJ secret sauce, but simply the fact that it's a very strong pool of students. As far as the satellite is concerned, yeah, it would be nice if all schools had this level of resources for kids who are interested. But FCPS base schools can't even get late bussing for more than one day a week, so many clubs are forced to try to meet on that day (which, in contrast with TJ's 8th period, has always struck me as the grossest and most unjustifiable inequity between TJ and the rest). |
I think the justification for 8th period is that the school draws from a vast geographic area, so that many/most kids would have no option to get home after the buses leave. That's not true for most base schools. People may not like the justification, but I think its reasonable. |
At our FCPS HS clubs meet during the 45 minute planning block in the middle of the day. |
My IB diploma grad says the same thing about Tufts. Her freshman year was significantly easier than high school, and her roommate and several friends were struggling. TJ is not the only way to a rigorous high school education that prepares students well for the rigors of college. It can be created at any school. |
There is no middle of the day planning block at TJ |
because they have 8th period |
I know someone who is late 30s and works her attendance at TJ into almost every conversation. She went to UVA. I went to UVA from a decidedly non-TJ hs. |
It's not reasonable that that option is only provided to TJ students. If the idea was to be equitable, you could also have a designated club day at TJ and late bussing on that day. Most FCPS high schools draw from a radius of six to seven miles, so most kids whose parents work are left with no option to get home either on the days school buses aren't available. That's why few or no clubs meet during those days, and to the extent they do, they're often sparsely attended. It's difficult to get a team of anything going if only four kids show up. The disparity is made worse by the fact that virtually all TJ families are affluent (3% FRM and a huge number of families that carpool so their kids won't have to ride the bus anyway). |
More folks going to, say, Pitt than to William and Mary is interesting. These numbers should be extremely concerning for William and Mary. The school has been eclipsed by UVA and, now, VT. |
The person who enlisted is going to outshine everyone else. |
whiz bang? |
Well, maybe. |
Actually, no. The kids from her base HS struggled at W&M freshman year, even though most of them had schedules filled with AP classes since sophomore year. IB schools are more rigorous, though, than the typical AP-focused HS. |