We all heard about it but have never experienced it. This is my first kid that went through this type of thing. We didn't know the reality - kind of naive. Luckily both we and the kid now know what's going on in the past few days and moved on. Kids talk. Some parents do punish their kids - hope they can adjust it quickly. |
thumb up! |
I don't really understand all of these posts. My kid knew that he had a 1 in 5 chance at best in being admitted. He was hopeful, since those are better odds than Powerball - but c'mon. No one is a shoe-in, not the "top students" (whoever they are?) not anyone. |
We did not know - the top students' chances are worse than lottery because it looks like they are deliberately rejected. To me, the process is: remove the top and bottom students, then lottery. (well, of course, there are always outliers.) |
Exactly what happened at my kid's school |
You are correct, they are deliberately rejected by the Illuminati. |
By educrats who want to social engineer and are tearing the community apart. |
If top students are waitlisted, I can understand it is a lottery. When they are just rejected, you know they are rejected deliberately. |
I think the waitlist is pretty small and again can be based on other factors. I wouldn't put much weight into it any more than a college admission to a top school. |
They waitlist a lot. All top performers at my kid's school are waitlisted. Those got offered were more like a lottery. Some are good but not the best. Some don't even care and won't survive the first year. |
What do you mean when you say top students? All As or something else. |
All As should be average. I am talking about those with most advanced math courses + STEM and other awards. |
I'm sure someone feels that way about my kid and it's true, they on the fence about going, but they have straight As, have always been a top-notch student and care about school very much and can handle the workload, but it's one of many interests. The rigor isn't the issue. |
When there are more candidates than spots, I would expect borderline candidates to be excluded rather than top students. However, they changed admissions to not look at a number of metrics which would help them separate candidates. They did this with an eye on equity. |
Someone posted on here there were rejections of kids who qualified for USAJMO in 7th grade. This is a contest that takes around the top 100 math students in the country. And that is among 10th graders and below. 7th or 8th grader to make this in Virginia is rare, but they couldn't find room in a class of 500. They also reject5 winners of MathCounts, Science Olympiad, and other contests. Really anyone who qualifies for the earlier round AIME should be accepted. |