If appears 4.2 to 4.663 is top half of the class. And bottom half has a wider spread from 3.255 to 4.2? Why is this so? |
You will only find a handful of very high GPAs like that in any given year. Many schools don't like those bookish kids anyway. |
T20s do want them. Many other schools just envy they cant attract those applicants. |
Ehh, Caltech wants (some of) them. Maybe UChicago and Northwestern too. |
Accept TJ, slog for four years, end up with 2.75 GPA, only to get admitted to NVCC, Shenandoah, Roanoke? No, thanks! |
NP - meaning those are the best schools you can get into with those grades and SATs? |
Currently have over half a dozen Cs on TJ transcript. How can we convince college admissions that had this student been at base high school there would've been no Cs? Is there a document that mentions relevant grading , something to the effect a C at TJ is equivalent to a B+ or A- at baae high-school. |
[quote=Anonymous]Currently have over half a dozen Cs on TJ transcript. How can we convince college admissions that had this student been at base high school there would've been no Cs? Is there a document that mentions relevant grading , something to the effect a C at TJ is equivalent to a B+ or A- at baae high-school. [/quote] I'm really sorry. This is every TJ parent's nightmare. Could he take some DE classes and get As in them? Why didn't you switch back to your home school after the first year of poor grades? |
2 ways: 1) how does this compare to others in DC's class 2) this is where SAT and AP's come into play. If you have a strong SAT (eg high Math score) - that can counterbalance a C in M4 |
Out of 550 kids in the class, there are at least 350 without a single C, and of them about 150 with a single B. If student has half a dozen Cs, they are most likely in bottom fourth of the class. With Calc AB as the minimum to graduate, it is unlikely colleges would even look at SAT math score. |
[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Currently have over half a dozen Cs on TJ transcript. How can we convince college admissions that had this student been at base high school there would've been no Cs? Is there a document that mentions relevant grading , something to the effect a C at TJ is equivalent to a B+ or A- at baae high-school. [/quote]
I'm really sorry. This is every TJ parent's nightmare. Could he take some DE classes and get As in them? Why didn't you switch back to your home school after the first year of poor grades?[/quote] DE classes at TJ are post AP, even more difficult to get As in them. First year courses are designed to be easy, with PE, Design and tech, band, ... as easy As. |
[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Currently have over half a dozen Cs on TJ transcript. How can we convince college admissions that had this student been at base high school there would've been no Cs? Is there a document that mentions relevant grading , something to the effect a C at TJ is equivalent to a B+ or A- at baae high-school. [/quote]
I'm really sorry. This is every TJ parent's nightmare. Could he take some DE classes and get As in them? Why didn't you switch back to your home school after the first year of poor grades?[/quote] DE classes at TJ are post AP, even more difficult to get As in them. First year courses are designed to be easy, with PE, Design and tech, band, ... as easy As. [/quote]I meant DE at a college, not TJ |
Colleges are aware of the rigors of TJ. However, half a dozen Cs sounds like a kid who should have gone back to base school. This kid would have benefited from being a big fish (or at least a medium sized fish) in a small pond. |
What if student goes back to base HS for senior year? Shows all As. That might work. |
seems like a troll thread topic |