I honestly don't really care that much, but it's pure pretzel logic to ignore the fact that TJ is the number one school in the country and has roughly four times as many NMSF as RM. All you have done is convince me that people in the magnet program at RM view themselves as totally separate from the rest of the school, which leads me to conclude they are likely despised by the other RM parents and students. |
see above |
no worse than tj parents view themselves totally separate from other fcps schools. |
HANDS DOWN!! |
Maybe, but TJ is actually ranked as number 1 high school in the country whereas RM IB is not. |
Sign of desperation. All caps. |
What good is ranking if they are out performed by small "no name" programs? Beaten by RM AND Blair. I'd take substance over ranking any day. |
you can do better than that. try again bud. |
TJ requires a 3.0 GPA to stay at the school. I don't know anything about the Maryland magnet programs. Do the students have to maintain a particular GPA to stay in these programs? I keep hearing the 100 number: do the same 100 students start as freshmen and continue to graduate from these programs? |
No GPA requirements but a few kids go back to home school due to stress/rigor of the program. 100 kids per grade. Start as freshmen together, graduate together. Kids build a long-lasting friendship as they go thru the program together. |
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I should also add the application process is similar to TJ - application, testing, pre-requisite courses, 4-5 LOR, essays, transcript but no interview.
Admit rate is usually 1 in 8 to 1 in 10. |
That's nice, very similar to TJ. I'm close to a number of TJ kids going back to the 2000s. Those kids form such close friendships and keep on supporting each other way past graduation from high school and even college. |
TJ was 1 out of 15 the year my child applied, but TJ kids only have that one option, not the choices among different programs to apply to that the MOCO kids have. |
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I don't see the point of comparing these schools and trying to show one as better than the others. No one has a choice of all these different programs. Virginia kids can't go to Maryland schools, Maryland kids can't go to Virginia schools.
Let's just be glad that the DC metropolitan area has so many promising students. |
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Another thing to keep in mind is that all the National Merit Semifinalists are judged on is how well they did on the PSAT in October of their junior year.
It stands to reason that kids who score highly enough on standardized tests to get into these competitive high school programs are also going to score well on standardized tests less than 2.5 years into their high school careers. |