Define “weaker” |
In other words equity is really important to this School Board unless it isn’t. That’s what they keep demonstrating time and time again. |
The School Board is just virtue signaling - typical of democrats. Means nothing. |
Admitted family here. Based on email last night it seems like class is either full or very close to it. Doubtful there will be any more significant waitlist movement. |
That's what it looks to mean. Perhaps fewer students declined offers than in the past. Really tough to get in.
|
Fewer gifted students, fewer exceptionally high IQ students, lower standardized test scores, less successful in competitive academic pursuits, contests, science fairs, and competitions. |
So we received an email about a week ago stating our child was accepted from the waitlist and to start the enrollment process. Then roughly 24 hours later, we received an email stating that this was a mistake. This apparently happened to the majority of the waitlisted children according to friends of our child. Now, I understand mistakes are made, but this is completely unacceptable. An apology email was sent to us which is nothing more than empty words at this point.
Its one thing for a student to be stuck waiting on a acceptance, its actually a good thing to teach them and apparently some parent as well, some patience. But, to send out an acceptance email, which prompted more than just our child to start the enrollment process, is completely unethical and could easily be considered negligence imo. |
You got an email? I thought the error was on the portal and people did not realize it unless they checked the portal. |
Not sure what PP is talking about. There was no email sent out. |
Nope, some families got an email. The admissions office’s “apology” email was pretty unprofessional. |
But was it equitable? |
1) Fewer "gifted" students: Unlikely that this will be the case. Fewer advanced students, perhaps. 2) Fewer exceptionally high IQ students: Severely unlikely that this will be the case as there were not that many at TJ to begin with. 3) Lower standardized test scores: This will certainly be the case because they are not overselecting for test taking ability. But it's pretty much irrelevant to the school environment. 4) Less successful in competitive academic pursuits: There will be somewhat fewer individuals on these teams, but the kids who actually compete in these competitions for TJ will still have gotten into the school. A lot of parents severely overestimate how many of their kids would have been in these positions. |
Does TJ use grade 7 or grade 8 GPA? And is it overall GPA or just Math and Science? |
By that you mean the fewer kids who study, the stronger the class would be? That's what test prep is-- studying. I don't see anything wrong with that. |
TJ will drop in every metric. Every single one. But here's the thing - we don't care. This is about opening up the opportunity to underserved communities and non-traditional students. You care about scores, we care about helping the entire community gets its gifted STEM kids on the path to STEM leaders representing a broad cross section of society for the next generation. |