Not in DC |
| HYP grad. I knew multiple GDS grads in my college class year. |
How long ago though...things have changed |
There are definitely feeder schools like Boston Latin sending more kids to Harvard than any other school in the country for no apparent reason other than their relationship. it's not that nobody from Boston Latin should get into Harvard but it is hard to explain without the concept of feeder schools. Going to Boston Latin is a hook for Harvard. |
Well, OK...but this asked about feeder schools in the DMV. For example, I don't know of any public DMV schools with a particularly special relationship with Georgetown. Like 10% of the Walls class gets an Associates Degree from GW and could get their bachelor's in another two years (though most don't)...I guess that is a special relationship though not sure if OP was thinking of a school like GW. |
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I don't think are any genuine public feeder schools in the DMV to particular selective colleges. There's no Boston Latin to Harvard kind of public school here for instance.
But the W schools tend to do very well. However, it'll be like 5 from Whitman to Yale one year, but zero the next year. But that same year they might get 5 to Duke and so on and so forth. So it's not a reliable conduit to any college in particular. But all the selective colleges are familiar with the W schools and those students tend to do very well with admissions. |
As a local whose kids went and are going through ACHS, I have noticed an above average number of kids go to UNC and Wisconsin compared to other local schools. Why I’m not sure … |
+1. Great school with great results. Many headed to Ivies, 20 accepted to Michigan according to Naviance, etc. etc. |
Look, B-CC is great, but its success and the success of J-R (and the success or lack of success of nearly all public high schools) is a function of parental income and education. They’re not feeder schools in the private school sense of having back door relationships between the high school CCO and the college AO that steer problem students to soft landing spots at respectable colleges, and sort out which of the top students will attend which T15 university. |
It should be quite easy - look at the AP scores, SAT scores, academic ECs, etc. |
Wisconsin and UNC are cheaper OOS than UCs and UofM, but still great schools. Makes sense for donut hole families. |
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No. What are being described are not feeder relationships, just that some colleges have mild preferences for particular high schools or patterns over the past few years, but few private schools are feeders anymore either.
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Well...it's not because a kid from Bladensburg may have a 4.0 (even in AP classes) but only a 1300 and just a couple of ECs and may not have taken many or any AP exams because the tests are expensive and perhaps the school won't cover the cost. The question is if someone coming from such a low performing school scoring a 1300 actually has more potential than kids from wealthier schools with all the advantages and a 1500. There is also the factor of whether that kid knows what they are getting themselves into and can withstand the culture shock when they show up on campus. A large percentage of these kids drop out for non-academic reasons. |
I think TJ students get into VT and WM at extraordinarily high rates considering their GPAs. |
| Lewis is a feeder to NOVA and GMU. |