It would be great if they were selecting the best students from each school but they aren't. It's almost random. |
Sure about that? Mukai seems supportive of DEI efforts. He offered a controversial African American history elective at his last school. And he seemed pretty supportive of having diverse spaces: "Now more than ever, we heighten our recognition that this is not the time to be silent. In the words of Dr. Brabrand, “We must lean into each other and into the community we’ve built to create places and spaces where all are welcome and seen.” As school leaders, we will continue to lead our students and staff in learning about, valuing, and embracing each other’s differences, while working to change the conditions that allow for injustice. Please know that your schools are here for you and stand with our Black and African American families. The diversity of our community makes the West Springfield Pyramid a fulfilling place to live, work, learn, and grow. " |
TJ used to be over 70% asian. What's it at now? |
Enrollment of Asian students is higher than almost all other years in the school's history. ![]() |
1. Bonitatibus is not just some random person chiming in on the changes during the hearings. Clearly, she is not the driving force behind the change but she cosigned it for the board. 2. There isn't much privilege to truncate. 3. Last year you would have ended up with 1243 algebra 1, 952 math 7, 29 geometry, and 8 algebra 2. I don't think there are 7th grade science SOLs. 2212 students with advance pass for ~300 spots. or did you mean the numerical scores? Because I don't think you are going to like the demographics of the kids that get perfect/near perfect scores on the math SOLs. |
The 1.5% should probably be based on base elementary school. Some middle schools send kids that almost all went to the same couple of elementary schools. |
This was during the BLM riots. Everybody was sensitive to race at the time. Most people weren't discriminating agasinst asians. |
There is no discrimination here. ![]() |
Careful. If you make any changes to the allocations then some group will claim “racism”. |
I am the person you responded to. Interesting perspective! You say you are a bit of an FCPS historian, and have been following TJ since its founding as a magnet school. Your post contains quite a bit of information, plus your opinion. I have noticed your writing style. It appears frequently in the 170+ page thread “TJ falls to 14th place,” and in nearly every other TJ thread. As the parent of a current freshman at TJ, I was wondering if you could do me a favor? - please stop posting. I’m serious: just stop. You are not a TJ parent. Your posts help none of us. If we want your exhaustive opinion, we can wade through the 170 pages of the other thread. This sub-forum is meant to help parents (in this case, concerning our children’s new principal, who personally seems to me to be a great fit). But your constant pollution of every single TJ thread with your same tired admissions-debate arguments only diminishes this site and its usefulness to parents. So I will ask you and the other non-parents again: Please stop. |
1. Exactly. It wasn’t her change, as the FT implied, but she did support it. 2. There is plenty of privilege. Stable housing and food, parents with college educations, knowledge of educational systems/applications/careers, some level of prep, etc. The gap between low-income and MC is much larger than between MC and rich. MC kids are lucky they are born with so much. 3. I’d use SOL scores as one of many data points. |
Asian american percent went from 73% to 54% after admissions change from merit to to race based. |
Of course it'll be number 1 again. First step towards return to meritocracy is this new qualified principal. |
Hey RWNJ troll pushing lies, the TJ principal has no control over the admissions process. Stop pushing your BS.
And Bonitatibus was certainly qualified. ![]() |
You're confused. The old system was rigged. People from a handful of wealthy feeders were buying the test questions. The new system uses merit by selecting the top students from each school! |