Not only is there no lottery policy for high school but the rising 9th graders also didn’t go through the lottery. |
| It's clear to me that PP is white and they are dissing on two distinct groups of students of color. The HS program still does take into account other student services. I dislike the idea that you are affiliated with the magnet in any way. |
Hopefully they are not! Nothing they said indicates they are. |
| The child of that weirdo PP talking about standard deviations is the type of students you want to avoid, OP. But those toxic students don’t make up the majority of the program. |
Of course- esp if they push themselves to join some (lunchtime) clubs or a sport. It’s a big school but my kid has gotten to know a lot of students outside the magnet this way. |
| Our dd appears to be happy. She is getting a great education and she is our third and we know both strong public and top private. She is self driven so I might miss if she is feeling pressure from other kids. I doubt she is. Besides learning how to handle school competition is not the worst thing and if it is there is definitely not unique to magnet, For her being with kids who are as smart and love math/science as much as she does is a huge plus. Also she is a POC in a white household and so the racial diversity of Blair and magnet is especially perfect for her. |
I thought they started lottery for MS magnet 4 years ago, the first lottery cohort are in already 10th grade now, how’s the rising 9th grader not part of the lottery?? |
No, they started MS lottery only a few years ago with Covid. The first MS lottery cohort is currently in 7th grade. |
Yes |
| Although DC had friends before the magnet, it seemed like they felt they had finally found their tribe once there. |
Yeah. Current 10,9,8 experienced very weird cogat + cohort thing for middle school magnets! |
Yes, middle school is a quasi lottery of the top 15%. The only difference between it and the previous system is they no longer use the cog at which was the test makers choice since they wouldn't allow it to be given during the pandemic. To be fair, the cog at didn't really lend much to the process beyond gatekeeping. |
Parent of recent grad here. I would agree with much of this. I don't think these kids are necessarily majority, but they know how to be heard. Had many conversations with mine about standing up to or avoiding them, whatever seemed like the best option for her. To Blair's credit, they are trying to foster a more collaborative environment in courses and general sense. There will be lots of kids who are team players, kind, collaborative. But, your kid will have to deal with "mag bros" to some degree. There are lots of faculty who are supportive of collaborative kids. There are lots of intelligent kids in non mag programs your kid will meet in other classes. So, don't be scared off by this. It's a good experience overall, cand there are supports throughout the program. Good luck! |
The choice was actually a test uniquely designed for mag admissions by Pearson. But, cost was high and test prep rampant (A++ or Dr. Li, anyone?), so it was discontinued. First switch to cogat, then to map. |
Actually, protesting forced prepping speaks to the test based system. I applaud mcps for seeking out students how don't get the intense enrichment that some students get (& of course those parents insist their kids are the "naturally " gifted). Maybe we can all just agree that we need more programs/spots. |