Too funny. |
LOL then why does the managing partner at a big law firm unsolicitedly talk about her TJ experience? Presumably because it's something she actually cares about. And she has a lot of influence over a lot of highly desirable jobs. Look, I have no dog in this fight. I went to a crappy high school. |
And another partner could value Oakton grads or Yorktown grads bc he/she went there. Impressive would be countless employers who did NOT go to TJ seeking out TJ grads. |
| Nope! I have a TJ grad (graduated in the past five years) at a T10. A large part of this result I, and they, believe is due to motivation by peer group and access to special opportunities (landing internships w/ TJ name, doing research/projects with other motivated and smart TJ kids). If they went to base would likely not have done as much in HS or gone somewhere as good. |
Disagree -Mid-‘90s TJ grad |
Please read above. You can’t objectively be the judge. It is NON TJ people thinking where you went to HS (30 years ago) is impressive still and helps you in the job or related opportunities and can explain how this is true wrt getting employment opportunities. |
My kid is heading to an ivy, from FCPS unhooked, in the fall. Why do you believe your last sentence? |
| Lol. Is your kid supposed to be identical to mine? I'm just saying what me and my kid thought. |
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I discovered when my kid went to TJ that he had no interest in a school like MIT. I guess I'd rather him figure that out before I pay 90K/year.
I do feel a little butthurt because I went to MIT lol. |
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Adding one more note - I was not a TJ grad, but at MIT there was a bunch of us that were upset about graduate school admissions. Mostly it was our grade point average that meant we wouldn't get to the interview process.
My friends and I had our graduate school rejection letters from Harvard posted in the bathroom. All of us landed at great schools, so looking back on it, it was no big deal. That said, it still stung. In the absolute worst case scenario, a friend applied to 25 medical schools and got into none. She had to do a masters and reapply. She did eventually get in and became a MD. |
Of course not! But it just seems like you are attributing your kid’s college outcome bc of TJ rather than bc of your kid. |
We have been having the same conversation. We are an APS family so our school experience (no AAP) has been different. TJ is appealing because they’d have peers equally as capable/dedicated to school. But there are tradeoffs too and it doesn’t guarantee good college placement so there is risk. |
Except that’s not happening for Oakton or Yorktown. The TJ alumni network is helpful for finding and getting jobs. I’m in a STEM field and TJ does come up every now and then. |
Low probability scenario, as by senior year it’s kind of too late for regrets to matter. Usually hits earlier, like sophomore year end especially if GPA isn’t great with bunch of Cs on transcript even without rigorous coursework, and the reality of college prospects starts to sink in, and that’s when the regret really sets in. |
If your kid regrets for this reason, your kiddo is not as smart as you think. |