It should not be based on race. |
The process was not created in a race blind manner. It was created to yield racially driven result. |
Same website. I’ve been tracking for years. |
It’s not. A portion of the seats are allocated by middle school. The rest are open. None are based on race. |
That is correct. The theory is the process appears “race blind.” However, the desired racial yield is still achieved by using “proxies” for race. In the case of admitting Black students, and LatinX students (who are not a race but are still within the targeted URM cohort), TJ’s admissions office considers proxies and examines details about a student's socio-economic background including whether they are economically disadvantaged or an English language learner. |
TJ has expanded access beyond the wealthy feeder schools. Many kids, of all backgrounds, will benefit. It’s race blind. And there are just as many Asian kids there today as before. |
academically wealthy feeders. When students put in hardwork they turn academically wealthy, even poor students. FCPS wants academically wealthy feeders for TJ survival. |
Broadly speaking, what you’ve posted here is correct and factual. The only quarrel I have is with the assertion - critically, one of the only parts of the history that does NOT carry a citation - that the changes to the admissions process “were meant to increase the ratio” of Black and Hispanic students at TJ. They were not, and there exists no evidence that the process that was eventually adopted had race as an explicit goal. There is absolutely evidence to suggest that the goal was to improve access for students from disadvantaged economic backgrounds. The fact that, especially in Northern Virginia, race and socioeconomic status track relatively well is not the fault of FCPS. Improving access to advanced educational opportunities more broadly, and especially beyond just TJ, should help to mitigate that reality and make such efforts needless. |
In theory they are all open to anyone but the chances that by coincidence none of the 100 extra seats went to asians over the last 4 years is infinitesimally low. The process is race blind but the way the process was engineered was not. it had a racial goal in mind. |
| Process is very much race aware if they know exactly which race to exclude from expansion quota. |
So you don't have a citable source? Once again the number of asians accepted post-change is lower in every year than it was in the year before the change. Going back doesn't really clarify things. The population of asians is not static. If you go back far enough TJ was majority white. That doesn't mean that they have been discriminating against whites since then. |
All but 100 seats are allocated by middle school and the reason they are allocated by middle school without a testing component was to try and achieve racial balance. The process is engineered to achieve racial outcomes. |
The point of a governor's school isn't to achieve representative student body. It is to collect the most gifted and talented kids in one place where their advanced academic needs can be met. Thwe race of the student is not important, should not be important but the entire process was engineered with racial goals in mind. |
I’ve been posting these numbers for years. The data was available from that source when I first posted it back then. The data might be available via other reports/websites. You could FOIA it if you want to double check. So white students lost seats to Asian students? Sounds like how some on here have defined discrimination. |
That’s how YOU would define “the point” of TJ. It was “engineered” to open access to bright STEM-interested kids from across the county, not just feeder schools. |