
This information is false. TJ does not look at all these things, though it would be great if they did. |
I have heard some superstars, who were winning STEM awards at the state level, were getting rejected. And it had nothing to do with bad grades as others here like to claim. |
I feel compelled to ask how it is that you know, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that those students who were admitted are "3rd or fourth tier". Do you actually know what those students have accomplished? Do you feel like you can confidently speak to the quality of their ENTIRE academic profile? And if so, why on earth do you have that information? |
MIT doesn't select a homogeneous group, but they also don't pass on the highest competency math and science people in favor of students who score below 600 Math SAT. |
Proof or it didn't happen. |
No there isnt. experience factors are unearned. I do like that proponents of this DEI-centric application process finally could pick and choose who they want and they ended up with kids who dont even have 7th grade Algebra. I find it hard to believe that the underrepresented MS didnt have kids with 7th grade algebra who wanted those auto 1.5 spots. The underrepresented MS's either dont have advanced kids (unlikely) or the advanced kids there met the same profile as years past and therefore couldnt be accepted. |
To go into detail on this would reveal individual students. But yes, I am confident of 3rd or 4th tier, and that higher caliber kids were rejected. Note when I say 3rd or 4th tier, I don't mean 100 in tier 1, 100 in tier 2, etc, but ability levels. There are very few in tier 1 or 2, and I am not confident I know everyone in these tiers at the school. It may be the kids who I think should have gotten in are not the top students, though I would be surprised. But I know they are higher caliber than the ones who got in, multiple tiers above. Also, some of these top students didn't even get on to the waitlist, which makes me give some weight to the idea that they are deliberately rejecting top students. I suppose it is possible the student put in the essay that he or she does not want to go to TJ, but I find this extremely unlikely. |
It is more complicated than that. I've been posting how they got it wrong at our school. I'm not certain but I don't think any bonus points came into play on these selections. |
No one is going to post names here I think. It has already been posted on here that kids who made USAJMO in 7th grade were not accepted in previous years. I know one student who was rejected this year, not waitlisted, who will be representing Virginia at a well known national STEM contest. I have heard the same happened with winners in another prominent STEM contest, but do not know names. It would be easy for me to find out, but again I wouldn't be posting them. |
This is true in one sense, but false in another. Experience factors are absolutely earned because they are meant to highlight those who have overcome some disadvantage, like poverty or a learning disability. To suggest that those points are "unearned" is to dismiss those factors as disadvantages. And you can't really do that when, under the old admissions process, less than 1% of TJ was FARMS and less than 1% of TJ had IEPs. It is true that those who are privileged enough not to have those situations cannot earn them, though. |
That's a non-answer. I have every confidence that there are a small group of students about whom you know an incredible amount within your school. But I strongly - STRONGLY - doubt that you have the same sort of knowledge about the students who did get in. They just don't happen to belong to your small cohort. |
Sounds like hearsay to push a narrative to me. But sure, keep trying to get movement on the waitlist so your kid or your friend's kid or your student can get in and make you look better. |
But its not an applicants fault that another kids parents have low paying jobs. If you remove components that can be prepped like admissions tests and allow quotas to a school, which they have done, then you are removing elements of one's SES privilege and boosting another. It makes more sense to apply those factors in a system that favors privilege. This new system removed those components. And 20% FARMs means that it mattered a good deal. And if they are at the same underrepresented MS, there is a good chance that the financial gap between the two kids isnt that large. Making 20k over the FARMs lines in fairfax county doesnt mean you are living in some big house with tutors for everything and violin lessons. Its wrong. |
I just find it surprising that they couldnt fill out the ranks to meet their diversity goals AND keep it equally advanced. |
And I'm confident you are a sour grapes poster who is being dishonest. |