The above two denials are really shocking. With those stats I am sure they will do well anywhere. |
Wow. Must have had terrible essays and recommendations. |
They look at much more beyond those test scores. There are many factors so just posting those three initial scores doesn’t say much other than that child qualified to be a semi finalist. |
My DC did a bit worse than that and got waitlisted...so I'm guessing it's the SIS/Essays? Or maybe the recommendations were good but not great (eg, positive but not glowing)? What's in the SIS again? |
My DS was denied with 94/98/97 |
You don’t know that your kid got excellent teacher recommendations. And you have no idea what went into the SIS and essay. My DS knows kids whose parents pushed TJ and didn’t want it and flat out said so in the essay so they weren’t selected. That’s apparently not an urban legend. It’s a thing that happens and a strategy the MS set has for getting out of TJ. And you will never know because admissions won’t give you an answer. Make your peace with it and move on. |
It's very hard to believe this denial based on the grades. Something not quite right. |
Could be lack of STEM activities. It seems to me that they are really looking for Science Olympiad, Mathcounts, etc. There are definitely more than 500 kids with all As, plenty of whom are in Alg II. But such high scores also, I don't know. The test is relatively new but it is bizarre that those scores wouldn't be high enough. |
DC admitted with no science Olympiad and no math counts or other stem activities or competitions (DC May have been the only applicant who didn’t do those activities). DC has all As (like everyone else) and has a genuine expressed interest in a specific area of science. Lots of high level sports and community service. Maybe they wanted some diversity of interests/activities and not all science Olympiad? Or just diversity in the expressed technology interests? I think the essays had to play a large role. |
No. Our friends child is literally one of the smartest human brings around- won multiple National academic awards, accepted to all ivies when he applied for college(not an urm , no hooks), incredible test scores and recs. He was denied. Some part of the process is a lottery, right? |
I am pretty sure no one gets a 100. Scores are percentiles. This is a troll. |
It think it does. My kid was admitted a couple years ago with a strong humanities bent, lots of music and a real passion for a science-humanities overlap area. No STEM ECs in MS and doesn’t do them at TJ either. Very involved in the school. Just not in STEM. Plenty of sports, music, drama, etc and more room to stand out in these areas. They need 30 kids for Science Olympiad. Not 1000. I just finished reading the college short answer questions they did for their guidance counselor. And it is so obvious when they are writing about something they love. The enthusiasm jumps off the page in a way you can’t fake. I certainly know kids who love STEM and have been admitted. But also kids who have loved less obvious STEM areas and get in. I think they will take the kid who has a real passion for something over the kid with higher scores and the perfect STEM resume every time. |
Nope. It’s how you end up with 100 kids from Carson and 4 from some of the Eastern County AAP Cemters. |
It was the personal essays. He is absolutely opposed to selling himself. He said he wanted to be true to himself in the essay and he would be okay with the outcome. It's just completely against his nature to be anything but modest. He could have easily come across as lacking self confidence. |
Well said, my kid was admitted today and he didn't do much STEM. He spent most of his time out of school on sports. |