If a kid will fall in top 30-50% in TJ, is going to TJ a better idea

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Anonymous wrote:One more thing we realized ( parent of TJ kid who went to Wisconsin) is that colleges don’t care about the fact that the kid went to TJ where good grades are so hard to come by.

Basically colleges look at overall GPA and which courses were taken. Thats all.



Do you and your son regret it?


We dont regret it as we dont know what the base experience would have been. But overall TJ years bring back more stress than a 'happy HS memory'.

Kid def says that in College his level of preparation is so much better than 99% of the kids. But again, that's well and good if the kid is actually able to get into the school of their choice.

My son wanted to go to UVA - but was rejected. Maybe from base school he would have made the cut for UVA? Who knows? In the end it worked out well at Wisconsin.


I wanted to share so that parents have the full picture.

The interesting/sad thing is that many parents know this about TJ but STILL get overcome by the TJ Brand Prestige and pressure their kids to go to TJ.


I’ve posted before how we did turn TJ down for a kid and it was not easy at the time. Other friends were admitted and it was hard as a parent- let alone a kid - not to feel the pull about the build up of how great of an opportunity it was going to be (from NON current parents but by parents of rising freshman).

You can’t just say take TJ versus a crapshoot of an ivy admittance from base because:

- TJ likely means (for the majority) a gpa hit. you see the above poster’s kid didn’t even get accepted to uva.

You need to go in with eyes open that it will be a difficult 4 years, long/late nights, dropping grades, long commute and an entirely different HS experience which can change who your kid becomes (good and bad ways).

For us, we were not willing to sacrifice my kid’s potential happiness (for increased stress and anxiety). Yes, mine is going to an ivy from base and likely would have had good college admission outcomes regardless where kid went (VERY unique applicant, high stats, research, internships, big awards, and good application presentation) but we didn’t know that 4 years ago. Back then, I only knew I wasn’t willing to put the inevitable stress on a happy, bright kid, even one who likes and excels at STEM.

Kid is still happy, still bright, and HS was pleasant both fo kid and for our household. Just encouraging everyone to look at various angles because all that glitters is not gold.


I think it's common wisdom that if your goal is UVA, then you should probably not go to TJ.
I think it's common wisdom that your GPA is very likely to be lower at TJ than your base school.
I think it's common wisdom that the rigor at TJ will make high school more academically challenging and perhaps more frustrating.

I think it is ALSO common wisdom that going to TJ will prepare you for college in a way that few other places will.
So, if going to the best possible undergrad is your end game then you should probably think long and hard about going to TJ regardless of your ability or enthusiasm.
But if you want to be challenged to meet your academic potential BEFORE you go away to college, then TJ might be the right place for those with high academic ability.

Different families will reach different conclusions depending on the kid.

But if your kid is not a top student getting somewhere around the 99th percentile in standardized tests, TJ may not be for you.


If going to the best possible undergrad is your endgame, you are stuck in a very outdated mentality that is not going to serve you or your kid at all. And you're not guaranteed to get a better outcome from your base school and it might even be worse.


I think it is the opposite: the long game (college) is more important than HS for bright kids. Are you thinking the top base school kids enter college and are floundering? That in a sea of undergraduates, only TJ students (regardless of rank) are the most successful?

UVA is NOT the measuring stick. IF highly ranked colleges are important to your family, then think long and hard about TJ. If you’re the type to worry about things later OR the TJ opportunities are worth it over all else, then go to TJ.

Tons and tons of non tj kids are well prepared for college. It is one of many ways to be prepared for college. Unless we are reading how only TJ grads are college valedictorians and how professors lament having to teach down to all non TJ grads. If so, sources?


College isn’t the long game. The point is that the delta between what you’re getting at TJ versus your base school vastly outpaces the delta between the school you’ll get into with and without TJ. If there even is one.

It is a bad choice to make a decision about what high school to attend based on what college may or may not be accessible from that high school. And I reject the notion that that’s an opinion.


We know. Trust us, we know you think this. You’re still wrong, but keep saying it.

Who can value education so much that TJ is so important but then not value education as much when evaluating colleges?


DP

The error you’re making here is presuming that prestige or selectivity correlates with quality of education. When it comes to college, increasingly it does not.

And further, forward-thinking employers are paying less attention to where you did your undergrad and more attention to demonstrations of your raw skill set… and TJ again creates the bigger delta there by a long shot.


I’m an attorney. We wouldn’t give a crap where you went to HS.


I'm also an attorney. We wouldn't give a crap where you went to college.


Agreed! The most important would be your last place of education and only then until you’ve had a career related full time job placement. Then we are more interested in experience, longevity/why left, etc.

The further back, the less important UNLESS it relates to a connection with the person: I see you went to x college. I did, too!


Exactly - my wife is Mayo Clinic/Hopkins trained surgeon- you would be shocked where she went to college (it's VA and not one people on DCUM even think about for 1s)


Then what’s with people saying going to TJ from 9th-12th helps in job apps? Unless you have no experience or are still in college, why would your HS name/stats still be on your resume? My college sophomore dropped it off the resume half way thru freshman year in college. It clutters the resume up with less relevant/irrelevant info.


It doesn’t help because you get to tell people you went to TJ.

It helps because what you got to do at TJ set you up to have a significantly more advanced experience at whatever college you attended, made you more attractive as a candidate for internships along the way (in some cases even resulting in corporations creating opportunities specifically for you), and set you up to have more immediate success at whatever initial job you end up at because you got to enjoy a greater level of rigor and develop stronger personal habits at an earlier and more formative age.

Never mind the fact that you spent those four *significantly-more-critical-than-college* years surrounded by a supremely bright group of kids that cares about school at a 100% rate.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:TJ alum often do help TJ grads find jobs.
More AP exams is actually dumbing down the TJ curriculum which was already harder than AP classes. AP at TJ is usually AP content PLUS a more rigorous content added bc the AP stuff alone is too easy.
My kid is at TJ and loves it AND has had strong college admissions outcomes. Do not worry.
Go to TJ if you can because the rigor makes TJ kids very well prepared for undergraduate classes… many report college feeling much easier.
Go to TJ and if you do not like it or find it too stressful, transfer back to base school, do not hesitate to have a pleasant high school experience! But TJ kids stay because in truth they really love it.
Yes many TJ kids cheat on assessments and they are bright little cheaters so it’s hard to catch them. Often they get mediocre college recs as result of their suspect integrity and maybe that’s why they aren’t getting into top colleges as much. However the honest kids are doing just fine and having success in the admissions game.


This person gets it. This absolutely happens to TJ students whose cheating behaviors are known to the faculty.

To be sure, some do get away with it, but when a kid gets caught cheating at TJ and either shows no remorse or gets off on a technicality, they absolutely get dinged on their recs. Teachers are friends and they talk, and they know this is a weapon they have to curb cheating.

Interestingly, they’ll write a good recommendation for kids who get caught and shape up and/or express genuine remorse for their actions in the restorative justice process.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:TJ alum often do help TJ grads find jobs.
More AP exams is actually dumbing down the TJ curriculum which was already harder than AP classes. AP at TJ is usually AP content PLUS a more rigorous content added bc the AP stuff alone is too easy.
My kid is at TJ and loves it AND has had strong college admissions outcomes. Do not worry.
Go to TJ if you can because the rigor makes TJ kids very well prepared for undergraduate classes… many report college feeling much easier.
Go to TJ and if you do not like it or find it too stressful, transfer back to base school, do not hesitate to have a pleasant high school experience! But TJ kids stay because in truth they really love it.
Yes many TJ kids cheat on assessments and they are bright little cheaters so it’s hard to catch them. Often they get mediocre college recs as result of their suspect integrity and maybe that’s why they aren’t getting into top colleges as much. However the honest kids are doing just fine and having success in the admissions game.


This person gets it. This absolutely happens to TJ students whose cheating behaviors are known to the faculty.

To be sure, some do get away with it, but when a kid gets caught cheating at TJ and either shows no remorse or gets off on a technicality, they absolutely get dinged on their recs. Teachers are friends and they talk, and they know this is a weapon they have to curb cheating.

Interestingly, they’ll write a good recommendation for kids who get caught and shape up and/or express genuine remorse for their actions in the restorative justice process.


Well, that just seems so disingenuous and wrong. A teacher knows the kid is a cheat and writes a rec with glowing praise bc the was was sorry?
Anonymous
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Anonymous wrote:One more thing we realized ( parent of TJ kid who went to Wisconsin) is that colleges don’t care about the fact that the kid went to TJ where good grades are so hard to come by.

Basically colleges look at overall GPA and which courses were taken. Thats all.



Do you and your son regret it?


We dont regret it as we dont know what the base experience would have been. But overall TJ years bring back more stress than a 'happy HS memory'.

Kid def says that in College his level of preparation is so much better than 99% of the kids. But again, that's well and good if the kid is actually able to get into the school of their choice.

My son wanted to go to UVA - but was rejected. Maybe from base school he would have made the cut for UVA? Who knows? In the end it worked out well at Wisconsin.


I wanted to share so that parents have the full picture.

The interesting/sad thing is that many parents know this about TJ but STILL get overcome by the TJ Brand Prestige and pressure their kids to go to TJ.


I’ve posted before how we did turn TJ down for a kid and it was not easy at the time. Other friends were admitted and it was hard as a parent- let alone a kid - not to feel the pull about the build up of how great of an opportunity it was going to be (from NON current parents but by parents of rising freshman).

You can’t just say take TJ versus a crapshoot of an ivy admittance from base because:

- TJ likely means (for the majority) a gpa hit. you see the above poster’s kid didn’t even get accepted to uva.

You need to go in with eyes open that it will be a difficult 4 years, long/late nights, dropping grades, long commute and an entirely different HS experience which can change who your kid becomes (good and bad ways).

For us, we were not willing to sacrifice my kid’s potential happiness (for increased stress and anxiety). Yes, mine is going to an ivy from base and likely would have had good college admission outcomes regardless where kid went (VERY unique applicant, high stats, research, internships, big awards, and good application presentation) but we didn’t know that 4 years ago. Back then, I only knew I wasn’t willing to put the inevitable stress on a happy, bright kid, even one who likes and excels at STEM.

Kid is still happy, still bright, and HS was pleasant both fo kid and for our household. Just encouraging everyone to look at various angles because all that glitters is not gold.


I think it's common wisdom that if your goal is UVA, then you should probably not go to TJ.
I think it's common wisdom that your GPA is very likely to be lower at TJ than your base school.
I think it's common wisdom that the rigor at TJ will make high school more academically challenging and perhaps more frustrating.

I think it is ALSO common wisdom that going to TJ will prepare you for college in a way that few other places will.
So, if going to the best possible undergrad is your end game then you should probably think long and hard about going to TJ regardless of your ability or enthusiasm.
But if you want to be challenged to meet your academic potential BEFORE you go away to college, then TJ might be the right place for those with high academic ability.

Different families will reach different conclusions depending on the kid.

But if your kid is not a top student getting somewhere around the 99th percentile in standardized tests, TJ may not be for you.


If going to the best possible undergrad is your endgame, you are stuck in a very outdated mentality that is not going to serve you or your kid at all. And you're not guaranteed to get a better outcome from your base school and it might even be worse.


I think it is the opposite: the long game (college) is more important than HS for bright kids. Are you thinking the top base school kids enter college and are floundering? That in a sea of undergraduates, only TJ students (regardless of rank) are the most successful?

UVA is NOT the measuring stick. IF highly ranked colleges are important to your family, then think long and hard about TJ. If you’re the type to worry about things later OR the TJ opportunities are worth it over all else, then go to TJ.

Tons and tons of non tj kids are well prepared for college. It is one of many ways to be prepared for college. Unless we are reading how only TJ grads are college valedictorians and how professors lament having to teach down to all non TJ grads. If so, sources?


College isn’t the long game. The point is that the delta between what you’re getting at TJ versus your base school vastly outpaces the delta between the school you’ll get into with and without TJ. If there even is one.

It is a bad choice to make a decision about what high school to attend based on what college may or may not be accessible from that high school. And I reject the notion that that’s an opinion.


We know. Trust us, we know you think this. You’re still wrong, but keep saying it.

Who can value education so much that TJ is so important but then not value education as much when evaluating colleges?


DP

The error you’re making here is presuming that prestige or selectivity correlates with quality of education. When it comes to college, increasingly it does not.

And further, forward-thinking employers are paying less attention to where you did your undergrad and more attention to demonstrations of your raw skill set… and TJ again creates the bigger delta there by a long shot.


I’m an attorney. We wouldn’t give a crap where you went to HS.


I'm also an attorney. We wouldn't give a crap where you went to college.


Agreed! The most important would be your last place of education and only then until you’ve had a career related full time job placement. Then we are more interested in experience, longevity/why left, etc.

The further back, the less important UNLESS it relates to a connection with the person: I see you went to x college. I did, too!


Exactly - my wife is Mayo Clinic/Hopkins trained surgeon- you would be shocked where she went to college (it's VA and not one people on DCUM even think about for 1s)


Then what’s with people saying going to TJ from 9th-12th helps in job apps? Unless you have no experience or are still in college, why would your HS name/stats still be on your resume? My college sophomore dropped it off the resume half way thru freshman year in college. It clutters the resume up with less relevant/irrelevant info.


It doesn’t help because you get to tell people you went to TJ.

It helps because what you got to do at TJ set you up to have a significantly more advanced experience at whatever college you attended, made you more attractive as a candidate for internships along the way (in some cases even resulting in corporations creating opportunities specifically for you), and set you up to have more immediate success at whatever initial job you end up at because you got to enjoy a greater level of rigor and develop stronger personal habits at an earlier and more formative age.

Never mind the fact that you spent those four *significantly-more-critical-than-college* years surrounded by a supremely bright group of kids that cares about school at a 100% rate.


But if it is tj-grad applicant v. Non-tj-grad applicant up for a job, it comes down to last school attended, stats, and experience.

This is different from posters saying tj was on resume for many years. That’s weird.
Anonymous
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Anonymous wrote:
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Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:One more thing we realized ( parent of TJ kid who went to Wisconsin) is that colleges don’t care about the fact that the kid went to TJ where good grades are so hard to come by.

Basically colleges look at overall GPA and which courses were taken. Thats all.



Do you and your son regret it?


We dont regret it as we dont know what the base experience would have been. But overall TJ years bring back more stress than a 'happy HS memory'.

Kid def says that in College his level of preparation is so much better than 99% of the kids. But again, that's well and good if the kid is actually able to get into the school of their choice.

My son wanted to go to UVA - but was rejected. Maybe from base school he would have made the cut for UVA? Who knows? In the end it worked out well at Wisconsin.


I wanted to share so that parents have the full picture.

The interesting/sad thing is that many parents know this about TJ but STILL get overcome by the TJ Brand Prestige and pressure their kids to go to TJ.


I’ve posted before how we did turn TJ down for a kid and it was not easy at the time. Other friends were admitted and it was hard as a parent- let alone a kid - not to feel the pull about the build up of how great of an opportunity it was going to be (from NON current parents but by parents of rising freshman).

You can’t just say take TJ versus a crapshoot of an ivy admittance from base because:

- TJ likely means (for the majority) a gpa hit. you see the above poster’s kid didn’t even get accepted to uva.

You need to go in with eyes open that it will be a difficult 4 years, long/late nights, dropping grades, long commute and an entirely different HS experience which can change who your kid becomes (good and bad ways).

For us, we were not willing to sacrifice my kid’s potential happiness (for increased stress and anxiety). Yes, mine is going to an ivy from base and likely would have had good college admission outcomes regardless where kid went (VERY unique applicant, high stats, research, internships, big awards, and good application presentation) but we didn’t know that 4 years ago. Back then, I only knew I wasn’t willing to put the inevitable stress on a happy, bright kid, even one who likes and excels at STEM.

Kid is still happy, still bright, and HS was pleasant both fo kid and for our household. Just encouraging everyone to look at various angles because all that glitters is not gold.


I think it's common wisdom that if your goal is UVA, then you should probably not go to TJ.
I think it's common wisdom that your GPA is very likely to be lower at TJ than your base school.
I think it's common wisdom that the rigor at TJ will make high school more academically challenging and perhaps more frustrating.

I think it is ALSO common wisdom that going to TJ will prepare you for college in a way that few other places will.
So, if going to the best possible undergrad is your end game then you should probably think long and hard about going to TJ regardless of your ability or enthusiasm.
But if you want to be challenged to meet your academic potential BEFORE you go away to college, then TJ might be the right place for those with high academic ability.

Different families will reach different conclusions depending on the kid.

But if your kid is not a top student getting somewhere around the 99th percentile in standardized tests, TJ may not be for you.


If going to the best possible undergrad is your endgame, you are stuck in a very outdated mentality that is not going to serve you or your kid at all. And you're not guaranteed to get a better outcome from your base school and it might even be worse.


I think it is the opposite: the long game (college) is more important than HS for bright kids. Are you thinking the top base school kids enter college and are floundering? That in a sea of undergraduates, only TJ students (regardless of rank) are the most successful?

UVA is NOT the measuring stick. IF highly ranked colleges are important to your family, then think long and hard about TJ. If you’re the type to worry about things later OR the TJ opportunities are worth it over all else, then go to TJ.

Tons and tons of non tj kids are well prepared for college. It is one of many ways to be prepared for college. Unless we are reading how only TJ grads are college valedictorians and how professors lament having to teach down to all non TJ grads. If so, sources?


College isn’t the long game. The point is that the delta between what you’re getting at TJ versus your base school vastly outpaces the delta between the school you’ll get into with and without TJ. If there even is one.

It is a bad choice to make a decision about what high school to attend based on what college may or may not be accessible from that high school. And I reject the notion that that’s an opinion.


We know. Trust us, we know you think this. You’re still wrong, but keep saying it.

Who can value education so much that TJ is so important but then not value education as much when evaluating colleges?


DP

The error you’re making here is presuming that prestige or selectivity correlates with quality of education. When it comes to college, increasingly it does not.

And further, forward-thinking employers are paying less attention to where you did your undergrad and more attention to demonstrations of your raw skill set… and TJ again creates the bigger delta there by a long shot.


I’m an attorney. We wouldn’t give a crap where you went to HS.


I'm also an attorney. We wouldn't give a crap where you went to college.


Agreed! The most important would be your last place of education and only then until you’ve had a career related full time job placement. Then we are more interested in experience, longevity/why left, etc.

The further back, the less important UNLESS it relates to a connection with the person: I see you went to x college. I did, too!


Exactly - my wife is Mayo Clinic/Hopkins trained surgeon- you would be shocked where she went to college (it's VA and not one people on DCUM even think about for 1s)


Then what’s with people saying going to TJ from 9th-12th helps in job apps? Unless you have no experience or are still in college, why would your HS name/stats still be on your resume? My college sophomore dropped it off the resume half way thru freshman year in college. It clutters the resume up with less relevant/irrelevant info.


It doesn’t help because you get to tell people you went to TJ.

It helps because what you got to do at TJ set you up to have a significantly more advanced experience at whatever college you attended, made you more attractive as a candidate for internships along the way (in some cases even resulting in corporations creating opportunities specifically for you), and set you up to have more immediate success at whatever initial job you end up at because you got to enjoy a greater level of rigor and develop stronger personal habits at an earlier and more formative age.

Never mind the fact that you spent those four *significantly-more-critical-than-college* years surrounded by a supremely bright group of kids that cares about school at a 100% rate.


But if it is tj-grad applicant v. Non-tj-grad applicant up for a job, it comes down to last school attended, stats, and experience.

This is different from posters saying tj was on resume for many years. That’s weird.


Yeah - the delta would come into play in the experience (probably indicated in the cover letter) you mentioned plus the interview. Real companies don’t make decisions entirely on stats anymore - this isn’t 1995.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:TJ alum often do help TJ grads find jobs.
More AP exams is actually dumbing down the TJ curriculum which was already harder than AP classes. AP at TJ is usually AP content PLUS a more rigorous content added bc the AP stuff alone is too easy.
My kid is at TJ and loves it AND has had strong college admissions outcomes. Do not worry.
Go to TJ if you can because the rigor makes TJ kids very well prepared for undergraduate classes… many report college feeling much easier.
Go to TJ and if you do not like it or find it too stressful, transfer back to base school, do not hesitate to have a pleasant high school experience! But TJ kids stay because in truth they really love it.
Yes many TJ kids cheat on assessments and they are bright little cheaters so it’s hard to catch them. Often they get mediocre college recs as result of their suspect integrity and maybe that’s why they aren’t getting into top colleges as much. However the honest kids are doing just fine and having success in the admissions game.


This person gets it. This absolutely happens to TJ students whose cheating behaviors are known to the faculty.

To be sure, some do get away with it, but when a kid gets caught cheating at TJ and either shows no remorse or gets off on a technicality, they absolutely get dinged on their recs. Teachers are friends and they talk, and they know this is a weapon they have to curb cheating.

Interestingly, they’ll write a good recommendation for kids who get caught and shape up and/or express genuine remorse for their actions in the restorative justice process.


Well, that just seems so disingenuous and wrong. A teacher knows the kid is a cheat and writes a rec with glowing praise bc the was was sorry?


1) I said “good”, not “glowing”

2) The fact that the kid cheated doesn’t make them “a cheat” - indeed, a fair number of “caught” academic integrity violations at TJ or any school are relatively benign in nature

3) Yes, sometimes kids show genuine character in these situations. Adversity has a way of showing positive traits, to include self-inflicted adversity.

These kids grow into themselves during this time period and oftentimes - especially when referring to kids from the so-called “feeder middle schools” - academic integrity is not something that is prioritized in the home. Kids who are able to successfully overcome that hindrance deserve all the credit in the world for it.
Anonymous
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Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:One more thing we realized ( parent of TJ kid who went to Wisconsin) is that colleges don’t care about the fact that the kid went to TJ where good grades are so hard to come by.

Basically colleges look at overall GPA and which courses were taken. Thats all.



Do you and your son regret it?


We dont regret it as we dont know what the base experience would have been. But overall TJ years bring back more stress than a 'happy HS memory'.

Kid def says that in College his level of preparation is so much better than 99% of the kids. But again, that's well and good if the kid is actually able to get into the school of their choice.

My son wanted to go to UVA - but was rejected. Maybe from base school he would have made the cut for UVA? Who knows? In the end it worked out well at Wisconsin.


I wanted to share so that parents have the full picture.

The interesting/sad thing is that many parents know this about TJ but STILL get overcome by the TJ Brand Prestige and pressure their kids to go to TJ.


I’ve posted before how we did turn TJ down for a kid and it was not easy at the time. Other friends were admitted and it was hard as a parent- let alone a kid - not to feel the pull about the build up of how great of an opportunity it was going to be (from NON current parents but by parents of rising freshman).

You can’t just say take TJ versus a crapshoot of an ivy admittance from base because:

- TJ likely means (for the majority) a gpa hit. you see the above poster’s kid didn’t even get accepted to uva.

You need to go in with eyes open that it will be a difficult 4 years, long/late nights, dropping grades, long commute and an entirely different HS experience which can change who your kid becomes (good and bad ways).

For us, we were not willing to sacrifice my kid’s potential happiness (for increased stress and anxiety). Yes, mine is going to an ivy from base and likely would have had good college admission outcomes regardless where kid went (VERY unique applicant, high stats, research, internships, big awards, and good application presentation) but we didn’t know that 4 years ago. Back then, I only knew I wasn’t willing to put the inevitable stress on a happy, bright kid, even one who likes and excels at STEM.

Kid is still happy, still bright, and HS was pleasant both fo kid and for our household. Just encouraging everyone to look at various angles because all that glitters is not gold.


I think it's common wisdom that if your goal is UVA, then you should probably not go to TJ.
I think it's common wisdom that your GPA is very likely to be lower at TJ than your base school.
I think it's common wisdom that the rigor at TJ will make high school more academically challenging and perhaps more frustrating.

I think it is ALSO common wisdom that going to TJ will prepare you for college in a way that few other places will.
So, if going to the best possible undergrad is your end game then you should probably think long and hard about going to TJ regardless of your ability or enthusiasm.
But if you want to be challenged to meet your academic potential BEFORE you go away to college, then TJ might be the right place for those with high academic ability.

Different families will reach different conclusions depending on the kid.

But if your kid is not a top student getting somewhere around the 99th percentile in standardized tests, TJ may not be for you.


If going to the best possible undergrad is your endgame, you are stuck in a very outdated mentality that is not going to serve you or your kid at all. And you're not guaranteed to get a better outcome from your base school and it might even be worse.


I think it is the opposite: the long game (college) is more important than HS for bright kids. Are you thinking the top base school kids enter college and are floundering? That in a sea of undergraduates, only TJ students (regardless of rank) are the most successful?

UVA is NOT the measuring stick. IF highly ranked colleges are important to your family, then think long and hard about TJ. If you’re the type to worry about things later OR the TJ opportunities are worth it over all else, then go to TJ.

Tons and tons of non tj kids are well prepared for college. It is one of many ways to be prepared for college. Unless we are reading how only TJ grads are college valedictorians and how professors lament having to teach down to all non TJ grads. If so, sources?


College isn’t the long game. The point is that the delta between what you’re getting at TJ versus your base school vastly outpaces the delta between the school you’ll get into with and without TJ. If there even is one.

It is a bad choice to make a decision about what high school to attend based on what college may or may not be accessible from that high school. And I reject the notion that that’s an opinion.


We know. Trust us, we know you think this. You’re still wrong, but keep saying it.

Who can value education so much that TJ is so important but then not value education as much when evaluating colleges?


DP

The error you’re making here is presuming that prestige or selectivity correlates with quality of education. When it comes to college, increasingly it does not.

And further, forward-thinking employers are paying less attention to where you did your undergrad and more attention to demonstrations of your raw skill set… and TJ again creates the bigger delta there by a long shot.


I’m an attorney. We wouldn’t give a crap where you went to HS.


I'm also an attorney. We wouldn't give a crap where you went to college.


Agreed! The most important would be your last place of education and only then until you’ve had a career related full time job placement. Then we are more interested in experience, longevity/why left, etc.

The further back, the less important UNLESS it relates to a connection with the person: I see you went to x college. I did, too!


Exactly - my wife is Mayo Clinic/Hopkins trained surgeon- you would be shocked where she went to college (it's VA and not one people on DCUM even think about for 1s)


Then what’s with people saying going to TJ from 9th-12th helps in job apps? Unless you have no experience or are still in college, why would your HS name/stats still be on your resume? My college sophomore dropped it off the resume half way thru freshman year in college. It clutters the resume up with less relevant/irrelevant info.


It doesn’t help because you get to tell people you went to TJ.

It helps because what you got to do at TJ set you up to have a significantly more advanced experience at whatever college you attended, made you more attractive as a candidate for internships along the way (in some cases even resulting in corporations creating opportunities specifically for you), and set you up to have more immediate success at whatever initial job you end up at because you got to enjoy a greater level of rigor and develop stronger personal habits at an earlier and more formative age.

Never mind the fact that you spent those four *significantly-more-critical-than-college* years surrounded by a supremely bright group of kids that cares about school at a 100% rate.


But if it is tj-grad applicant v. Non-tj-grad applicant up for a job, it comes down to last school attended, stats, and experience.

This is different from posters saying tj was on resume for many years. That’s weird.


Yeah - the delta would come into play in the experience (probably indicated in the cover letter) you mentioned plus the interview. Real companies don’t make decisions entirely on stats anymore - this isn’t 1995.


The job market for new grads or inters sucks. You’re not getting interviews without stats or experience or something specific and narrow (7% disability hires, etc).
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:TJ alum often do help TJ grads find jobs.
More AP exams is actually dumbing down the TJ curriculum which was already harder than AP classes. AP at TJ is usually AP content PLUS a more rigorous content added bc the AP stuff alone is too easy.
My kid is at TJ and loves it AND has had strong college admissions outcomes. Do not worry.
Go to TJ if you can because the rigor makes TJ kids very well prepared for undergraduate classes… many report college feeling much easier.
Go to TJ and if you do not like it or find it too stressful, transfer back to base school, do not hesitate to have a pleasant high school experience! But TJ kids stay because in truth they really love it.
Yes many TJ kids cheat on assessments and they are bright little cheaters so it’s hard to catch them. Often they get mediocre college recs as result of their suspect integrity and maybe that’s why they aren’t getting into top colleges as much. However the honest kids are doing just fine and having success in the admissions game.


This person gets it. This absolutely happens to TJ students whose cheating behaviors are known to the faculty.

To be sure, some do get away with it, but when a kid gets caught cheating at TJ and either shows no remorse or gets off on a technicality, they absolutely get dinged on their recs. Teachers are friends and they talk, and they know this is a weapon they have to curb cheating.

Interestingly, they’ll write a good recommendation for kids who get caught and shape up and/or express genuine remorse for their actions in the restorative justice process.


Well, that just seems so disingenuous and wrong. A teacher knows the kid is a cheat and writes a rec with glowing praise bc the was was sorry?


1) I said “good”, not “glowing”

2) The fact that the kid cheated doesn’t make them “a cheat” - indeed, a fair number of “caught” academic integrity violations at TJ or any school are relatively benign in nature

3) Yes, sometimes kids show genuine character in these situations. Adversity has a way of showing positive traits, to include self-inflicted adversity.

These kids grow into themselves during this time period and oftentimes - especially when referring to kids from the so-called “feeder middle schools” - academic integrity is not something that is prioritized in the home. Kids who are able to successfully overcome that hindrance deserve all the credit in the world for it.


Oh wow! Merriam Webster and I are confused. A cheat is one who cheats. A thief is one who steals. There isn’t a threshold of wrongdoing that has to occur before you meet the definition. If you cheat, you’re a cheater, even if you regret it when caught. And to be caught, it’s highly unlikely it was the first time cheating.

TJ has lots of cheaters who are doing it for grades NOT bc they have never had integrity prioritized at home.
Anonymous
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Anonymous wrote:
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Anonymous wrote:
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Anonymous wrote:One more thing we realized ( parent of TJ kid who went to Wisconsin) is that colleges don’t care about the fact that the kid went to TJ where good grades are so hard to come by.

Basically colleges look at overall GPA and which courses were taken. Thats all.



Do you and your son regret it?


We dont regret it as we dont know what the base experience would have been. But overall TJ years bring back more stress than a 'happy HS memory'.

Kid def says that in College his level of preparation is so much better than 99% of the kids. But again, that's well and good if the kid is actually able to get into the school of their choice.

My son wanted to go to UVA - but was rejected. Maybe from base school he would have made the cut for UVA? Who knows? In the end it worked out well at Wisconsin.


I wanted to share so that parents have the full picture.

The interesting/sad thing is that many parents know this about TJ but STILL get overcome by the TJ Brand Prestige and pressure their kids to go to TJ.


I’ve posted before how we did turn TJ down for a kid and it was not easy at the time. Other friends were admitted and it was hard as a parent- let alone a kid - not to feel the pull about the build up of how great of an opportunity it was going to be (from NON current parents but by parents of rising freshman).

You can’t just say take TJ versus a crapshoot of an ivy admittance from base because:

- TJ likely means (for the majority) a gpa hit. you see the above poster’s kid didn’t even get accepted to uva.

You need to go in with eyes open that it will be a difficult 4 years, long/late nights, dropping grades, long commute and an entirely different HS experience which can change who your kid becomes (good and bad ways).

For us, we were not willing to sacrifice my kid’s potential happiness (for increased stress and anxiety). Yes, mine is going to an ivy from base and likely would have had good college admission outcomes regardless where kid went (VERY unique applicant, high stats, research, internships, big awards, and good application presentation) but we didn’t know that 4 years ago. Back then, I only knew I wasn’t willing to put the inevitable stress on a happy, bright kid, even one who likes and excels at STEM.

Kid is still happy, still bright, and HS was pleasant both fo kid and for our household. Just encouraging everyone to look at various angles because all that glitters is not gold.


I think it's common wisdom that if your goal is UVA, then you should probably not go to TJ.
I think it's common wisdom that your GPA is very likely to be lower at TJ than your base school.
I think it's common wisdom that the rigor at TJ will make high school more academically challenging and perhaps more frustrating.

I think it is ALSO common wisdom that going to TJ will prepare you for college in a way that few other places will.
So, if going to the best possible undergrad is your end game then you should probably think long and hard about going to TJ regardless of your ability or enthusiasm.
But if you want to be challenged to meet your academic potential BEFORE you go away to college, then TJ might be the right place for those with high academic ability.

Different families will reach different conclusions depending on the kid.

But if your kid is not a top student getting somewhere around the 99th percentile in standardized tests, TJ may not be for you.


If going to the best possible undergrad is your endgame, you are stuck in a very outdated mentality that is not going to serve you or your kid at all. And you're not guaranteed to get a better outcome from your base school and it might even be worse.


I think it is the opposite: the long game (college) is more important than HS for bright kids. Are you thinking the top base school kids enter college and are floundering? That in a sea of undergraduates, only TJ students (regardless of rank) are the most successful?

UVA is NOT the measuring stick. IF highly ranked colleges are important to your family, then think long and hard about TJ. If you’re the type to worry about things later OR the TJ opportunities are worth it over all else, then go to TJ.

Tons and tons of non tj kids are well prepared for college. It is one of many ways to be prepared for college. Unless we are reading how only TJ grads are college valedictorians and how professors lament having to teach down to all non TJ grads. If so, sources?


College isn’t the long game. The point is that the delta between what you’re getting at TJ versus your base school vastly outpaces the delta between the school you’ll get into with and without TJ. If there even is one.

It is a bad choice to make a decision about what high school to attend based on what college may or may not be accessible from that high school. And I reject the notion that that’s an opinion.


We know. Trust us, we know you think this. You’re still wrong, but keep saying it.

Who can value education so much that TJ is so important but then not value education as much when evaluating colleges?


DP

The error you’re making here is presuming that prestige or selectivity correlates with quality of education. When it comes to college, increasingly it does not.

And further, forward-thinking employers are paying less attention to where you did your undergrad and more attention to demonstrations of your raw skill set… and TJ again creates the bigger delta there by a long shot.


I’m an attorney. We wouldn’t give a crap where you went to HS.


I'm also an attorney. We wouldn't give a crap where you went to college.


Agreed! The most important would be your last place of education and only then until you’ve had a career related full time job placement. Then we are more interested in experience, longevity/why left, etc.

The further back, the less important UNLESS it relates to a connection with the person: I see you went to x college. I did, too!


Exactly - my wife is Mayo Clinic/Hopkins trained surgeon- you would be shocked where she went to college (it's VA and not one people on DCUM even think about for 1s)


Then what’s with people saying going to TJ from 9th-12th helps in job apps? Unless you have no experience or are still in college, why would your HS name/stats still be on your resume? My college sophomore dropped it off the resume half way thru freshman year in college. It clutters the resume up with less relevant/irrelevant info.


It doesn’t help because you get to tell people you went to TJ.

It helps because what you got to do at TJ set you up to have a significantly more advanced experience at whatever college you attended, made you more attractive as a candidate for internships along the way (in some cases even resulting in corporations creating opportunities specifically for you), and set you up to have more immediate success at whatever initial job you end up at because you got to enjoy a greater level of rigor and develop stronger personal habits at an earlier and more formative age.

Never mind the fact that you spent those four *significantly-more-critical-than-college* years surrounded by a supremely bright group of kids that cares about school at a 100% rate.


But if it is tj-grad applicant v. Non-tj-grad applicant up for a job, it comes down to last school attended, stats, and experience.

This is different from posters saying tj was on resume for many years. That’s weird.


Yeah - the delta would come into play in the experience (probably indicated in the cover letter) you mentioned plus the interview. Real companies don’t make decisions entirely on stats anymore - this isn’t 1995.


The job market for new grads or inters sucks. You’re not getting interviews without stats or experience or something specific and narrow (7% disability hires, etc).


Like graduating from a universally acclaimed STEM focused high school.

Appreciate the setup there.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:TJ alum often do help TJ grads find jobs.
More AP exams is actually dumbing down the TJ curriculum which was already harder than AP classes. AP at TJ is usually AP content PLUS a more rigorous content added bc the AP stuff alone is too easy.
My kid is at TJ and loves it AND has had strong college admissions outcomes. Do not worry.
Go to TJ if you can because the rigor makes TJ kids very well prepared for undergraduate classes… many report college feeling much easier.
Go to TJ and if you do not like it or find it too stressful, transfer back to base school, do not hesitate to have a pleasant high school experience! But TJ kids stay because in truth they really love it.
Yes many TJ kids cheat on assessments and they are bright little cheaters so it’s hard to catch them. Often they get mediocre college recs as result of their suspect integrity and maybe that’s why they aren’t getting into top colleges as much. However the honest kids are doing just fine and having success in the admissions game.


This person gets it. This absolutely happens to TJ students whose cheating behaviors are known to the faculty.

To be sure, some do get away with it, but when a kid gets caught cheating at TJ and either shows no remorse or gets off on a technicality, they absolutely get dinged on their recs. Teachers are friends and they talk, and they know this is a weapon they have to curb cheating.

Interestingly, they’ll write a good recommendation for kids who get caught and shape up and/or express genuine remorse for their actions in the restorative justice process.


Well, that just seems so disingenuous and wrong. A teacher knows the kid is a cheat and writes a rec with glowing praise bc the was was sorry?


1) I said “good”, not “glowing”

2) The fact that the kid cheated doesn’t make them “a cheat” - indeed, a fair number of “caught” academic integrity violations at TJ or any school are relatively benign in nature

3) Yes, sometimes kids show genuine character in these situations. Adversity has a way of showing positive traits, to include self-inflicted adversity.

These kids grow into themselves during this time period and oftentimes - especially when referring to kids from the so-called “feeder middle schools” - academic integrity is not something that is prioritized in the home. Kids who are able to successfully overcome that hindrance deserve all the credit in the world for it.


Oh wow! Merriam Webster and I are confused. A cheat is one who cheats. A thief is one who steals. There isn’t a threshold of wrongdoing that has to occur before you meet the definition. If you cheat, you’re a cheater, even if you regret it when caught. And to be caught, it’s highly unlikely it was the first time cheating.

TJ has lots of cheaters who are doing it for grades NOT bc they have never had integrity prioritized at home.


Fun fact: These two things actually go hand in hand pretty neatly

Seriously, you all are making this way too easy
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:One more thing we realized ( parent of TJ kid who went to Wisconsin) is that colleges don’t care about the fact that the kid went to TJ where good grades are so hard to come by.

Basically colleges look at overall GPA and which courses were taken. Thats all.



Do you and your son regret it?


We dont regret it as we dont know what the base experience would have been. But overall TJ years bring back more stress than a 'happy HS memory'.

Kid def says that in College his level of preparation is so much better than 99% of the kids. But again, that's well and good if the kid is actually able to get into the school of their choice.

My son wanted to go to UVA - but was rejected. Maybe from base school he would have made the cut for UVA? Who knows? In the end it worked out well at Wisconsin.


I wanted to share so that parents have the full picture.

The interesting/sad thing is that many parents know this about TJ but STILL get overcome by the TJ Brand Prestige and pressure their kids to go to TJ.


I’ve posted before how we did turn TJ down for a kid and it was not easy at the time. Other friends were admitted and it was hard as a parent- let alone a kid - not to feel the pull about the build up of how great of an opportunity it was going to be (from NON current parents but by parents of rising freshman).

You can’t just say take TJ versus a crapshoot of an ivy admittance from base because:

- TJ likely means (for the majority) a gpa hit. you see the above poster’s kid didn’t even get accepted to uva.

You need to go in with eyes open that it will be a difficult 4 years, long/late nights, dropping grades, long commute and an entirely different HS experience which can change who your kid becomes (good and bad ways).

For us, we were not willing to sacrifice my kid’s potential happiness (for increased stress and anxiety). Yes, mine is going to an ivy from base and likely would have had good college admission outcomes regardless where kid went (VERY unique applicant, high stats, research, internships, big awards, and good application presentation) but we didn’t know that 4 years ago. Back then, I only knew I wasn’t willing to put the inevitable stress on a happy, bright kid, even one who likes and excels at STEM.

Kid is still happy, still bright, and HS was pleasant both fo kid and for our household. Just encouraging everyone to look at various angles because all that glitters is not gold.


I think it's common wisdom that if your goal is UVA, then you should probably not go to TJ.
I think it's common wisdom that your GPA is very likely to be lower at TJ than your base school.
I think it's common wisdom that the rigor at TJ will make high school more academically challenging and perhaps more frustrating.

I think it is ALSO common wisdom that going to TJ will prepare you for college in a way that few other places will.
So, if going to the best possible undergrad is your end game then you should probably think long and hard about going to TJ regardless of your ability or enthusiasm.
But if you want to be challenged to meet your academic potential BEFORE you go away to college, then TJ might be the right place for those with high academic ability.

Different families will reach different conclusions depending on the kid.

But if your kid is not a top student getting somewhere around the 99th percentile in standardized tests, TJ may not be for you.


If going to the best possible undergrad is your endgame, you are stuck in a very outdated mentality that is not going to serve you or your kid at all. And you're not guaranteed to get a better outcome from your base school and it might even be worse.


I think it is the opposite: the long game (college) is more important than HS for bright kids. Are you thinking the top base school kids enter college and are floundering? That in a sea of undergraduates, only TJ students (regardless of rank) are the most successful?

UVA is NOT the measuring stick. IF highly ranked colleges are important to your family, then think long and hard about TJ. If you’re the type to worry about things later OR the TJ opportunities are worth it over all else, then go to TJ.

Tons and tons of non tj kids are well prepared for college. It is one of many ways to be prepared for college. Unless we are reading how only TJ grads are college valedictorians and how professors lament having to teach down to all non TJ grads. If so, sources?


College isn’t the long game. The point is that the delta between what you’re getting at TJ versus your base school vastly outpaces the delta between the school you’ll get into with and without TJ. If there even is one.

It is a bad choice to make a decision about what high school to attend based on what college may or may not be accessible from that high school. And I reject the notion that that’s an opinion.


We know. Trust us, we know you think this. You’re still wrong, but keep saying it.

Who can value education so much that TJ is so important but then not value education as much when evaluating colleges?


DP

The error you’re making here is presuming that prestige or selectivity correlates with quality of education. When it comes to college, increasingly it does not.

And further, forward-thinking employers are paying less attention to where you did your undergrad and more attention to demonstrations of your raw skill set… and TJ again creates the bigger delta there by a long shot.


I’m an attorney. We wouldn’t give a crap where you went to HS.


I'm also an attorney. We wouldn't give a crap where you went to college.


Agreed! The most important would be your last place of education and only then until you’ve had a career related full time job placement. Then we are more interested in experience, longevity/why left, etc.

The further back, the less important UNLESS it relates to a connection with the person: I see you went to x college. I did, too!


Exactly - my wife is Mayo Clinic/Hopkins trained surgeon- you would be shocked where she went to college (it's VA and not one people on DCUM even think about for 1s)


Then what’s with people saying going to TJ from 9th-12th helps in job apps? Unless you have no experience or are still in college, why would your HS name/stats still be on your resume? My college sophomore dropped it off the resume half way thru freshman year in college. It clutters the resume up with less relevant/irrelevant info.


It doesn’t help because you get to tell people you went to TJ.

It helps because what you got to do at TJ set you up to have a significantly more advanced experience at whatever college you attended, made you more attractive as a candidate for internships along the way (in some cases even resulting in corporations creating opportunities specifically for you), and set you up to have more immediate success at whatever initial job you end up at because you got to enjoy a greater level of rigor and develop stronger personal habits at an earlier and more formative age.

Never mind the fact that you spent those four *significantly-more-critical-than-college* years surrounded by a supremely bright group of kids that cares about school at a 100% rate.


But if it is tj-grad applicant v. Non-tj-grad applicant up for a job, it comes down to last school attended, stats, and experience.

This is different from posters saying tj was on resume for many years. That’s weird.


Yeah - the delta would come into play in the experience (probably indicated in the cover letter) you mentioned plus the interview. Real companies don’t make decisions entirely on stats anymore - this isn’t 1995.


The job market for new grads or inters sucks. You’re not getting interviews without stats or experience or something specific and narrow (7% disability hires, etc).


Like graduating from a universally acclaimed STEM focused high school.

Appreciate the setup there.


Yeah, employers really want kids who went to TJ. But I do wonder why TJ kids are working in restaurants and stores when they have tried for internships and research.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:One more thing we realized ( parent of TJ kid who went to Wisconsin) is that colleges don’t care about the fact that the kid went to TJ where good grades are so hard to come by.

Basically colleges look at overall GPA and which courses were taken. Thats all.



Do you and your son regret it?


We dont regret it as we dont know what the base experience would have been. But overall TJ years bring back more stress than a 'happy HS memory'.

Kid def says that in College his level of preparation is so much better than 99% of the kids. But again, that's well and good if the kid is actually able to get into the school of their choice.

My son wanted to go to UVA - but was rejected. Maybe from base school he would have made the cut for UVA? Who knows? In the end it worked out well at Wisconsin.


I wanted to share so that parents have the full picture.

The interesting/sad thing is that many parents know this about TJ but STILL get overcome by the TJ Brand Prestige and pressure their kids to go to TJ.


I’ve posted before how we did turn TJ down for a kid and it was not easy at the time. Other friends were admitted and it was hard as a parent- let alone a kid - not to feel the pull about the build up of how great of an opportunity it was going to be (from NON current parents but by parents of rising freshman).

You can’t just say take TJ versus a crapshoot of an ivy admittance from base because:

- TJ likely means (for the majority) a gpa hit. you see the above poster’s kid didn’t even get accepted to uva.

You need to go in with eyes open that it will be a difficult 4 years, long/late nights, dropping grades, long commute and an entirely different HS experience which can change who your kid becomes (good and bad ways).

For us, we were not willing to sacrifice my kid’s potential happiness (for increased stress and anxiety). Yes, mine is going to an ivy from base and likely would have had good college admission outcomes regardless where kid went (VERY unique applicant, high stats, research, internships, big awards, and good application presentation) but we didn’t know that 4 years ago. Back then, I only knew I wasn’t willing to put the inevitable stress on a happy, bright kid, even one who likes and excels at STEM.

Kid is still happy, still bright, and HS was pleasant both fo kid and for our household. Just encouraging everyone to look at various angles because all that glitters is not gold.


I think it's common wisdom that if your goal is UVA, then you should probably not go to TJ.
I think it's common wisdom that your GPA is very likely to be lower at TJ than your base school.
I think it's common wisdom that the rigor at TJ will make high school more academically challenging and perhaps more frustrating.

I think it is ALSO common wisdom that going to TJ will prepare you for college in a way that few other places will.
So, if going to the best possible undergrad is your end game then you should probably think long and hard about going to TJ regardless of your ability or enthusiasm.
But if you want to be challenged to meet your academic potential BEFORE you go away to college, then TJ might be the right place for those with high academic ability.

Different families will reach different conclusions depending on the kid.

But if your kid is not a top student getting somewhere around the 99th percentile in standardized tests, TJ may not be for you.


If going to the best possible undergrad is your endgame, you are stuck in a very outdated mentality that is not going to serve you or your kid at all. And you're not guaranteed to get a better outcome from your base school and it might even be worse.


I think it is the opposite: the long game (college) is more important than HS for bright kids. Are you thinking the top base school kids enter college and are floundering? That in a sea of undergraduates, only TJ students (regardless of rank) are the most successful?

UVA is NOT the measuring stick. IF highly ranked colleges are important to your family, then think long and hard about TJ. If you’re the type to worry about things later OR the TJ opportunities are worth it over all else, then go to TJ.

Tons and tons of non tj kids are well prepared for college. It is one of many ways to be prepared for college. Unless we are reading how only TJ grads are college valedictorians and how professors lament having to teach down to all non TJ grads. If so, sources?


College isn’t the long game. The point is that the delta between what you’re getting at TJ versus your base school vastly outpaces the delta between the school you’ll get into with and without TJ. If there even is one.

It is a bad choice to make a decision about what high school to attend based on what college may or may not be accessible from that high school. And I reject the notion that that’s an opinion.


We know. Trust us, we know you think this. You’re still wrong, but keep saying it.

Who can value education so much that TJ is so important but then not value education as much when evaluating colleges?


DP

The error you’re making here is presuming that prestige or selectivity correlates with quality of education. When it comes to college, increasingly it does not.

And further, forward-thinking employers are paying less attention to where you did your undergrad and more attention to demonstrations of your raw skill set… and TJ again creates the bigger delta there by a long shot.


I’m an attorney. We wouldn’t give a crap where you went to HS.


I'm also an attorney. We wouldn't give a crap where you went to college.


Agreed! The most important would be your last place of education and only then until you’ve had a career related full time job placement. Then we are more interested in experience, longevity/why left, etc.

The further back, the less important UNLESS it relates to a connection with the person: I see you went to x college. I did, too!


Exactly - my wife is Mayo Clinic/Hopkins trained surgeon- you would be shocked where she went to college (it's VA and not one people on DCUM even think about for 1s)


Then what’s with people saying going to TJ from 9th-12th helps in job apps? Unless you have no experience or are still in college, why would your HS name/stats still be on your resume? My college sophomore dropped it off the resume half way thru freshman year in college. It clutters the resume up with less relevant/irrelevant info.


It doesn’t help because you get to tell people you went to TJ.

It helps because what you got to do at TJ set you up to have a significantly more advanced experience at whatever college you attended, made you more attractive as a candidate for internships along the way (in some cases even resulting in corporations creating opportunities specifically for you), and set you up to have more immediate success at whatever initial job you end up at because you got to enjoy a greater level of rigor and develop stronger personal habits at an earlier and more formative age.

Never mind the fact that you spent those four *significantly-more-critical-than-college* years surrounded by a supremely bright group of kids that cares about school at a 100% rate.


But if it is tj-grad applicant v. Non-tj-grad applicant up for a job, it comes down to last school attended, stats, and experience.

This is different from posters saying tj was on resume for many years. That’s weird.


Yeah - the delta would come into play in the experience (probably indicated in the cover letter) you mentioned plus the interview. Real companies don’t make decisions entirely on stats anymore - this isn’t 1995.


The job market for new grads or inters sucks. You’re not getting interviews without stats or experience or something specific and narrow (7% disability hires, etc).


Like graduating from a universally acclaimed STEM focused high school.

Appreciate the setup there.


Yeah, employers really want kids who went to TJ. But I do wonder why TJ kids are working in restaurants and stores when they have tried for internships and research.


Because for the first time ever they come from
economically disadvantaged families and actually need to contribute to the family income by getting valuable early work experience in some cases?

Tap out, friend. You’re out of your depth.

Anonymous
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Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
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Anonymous wrote:
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Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:One more thing we realized ( parent of TJ kid who went to Wisconsin) is that colleges don’t care about the fact that the kid went to TJ where good grades are so hard to come by.

Basically colleges look at overall GPA and which courses were taken. Thats all.



Do you and your son regret it?


We dont regret it as we dont know what the base experience would have been. But overall TJ years bring back more stress than a 'happy HS memory'.

Kid def says that in College his level of preparation is so much better than 99% of the kids. But again, that's well and good if the kid is actually able to get into the school of their choice.

My son wanted to go to UVA - but was rejected. Maybe from base school he would have made the cut for UVA? Who knows? In the end it worked out well at Wisconsin.


I wanted to share so that parents have the full picture.

The interesting/sad thing is that many parents know this about TJ but STILL get overcome by the TJ Brand Prestige and pressure their kids to go to TJ.


I’ve posted before how we did turn TJ down for a kid and it was not easy at the time. Other friends were admitted and it was hard as a parent- let alone a kid - not to feel the pull about the build up of how great of an opportunity it was going to be (from NON current parents but by parents of rising freshman).

You can’t just say take TJ versus a crapshoot of an ivy admittance from base because:

- TJ likely means (for the majority) a gpa hit. you see the above poster’s kid didn’t even get accepted to uva.

You need to go in with eyes open that it will be a difficult 4 years, long/late nights, dropping grades, long commute and an entirely different HS experience which can change who your kid becomes (good and bad ways).

For us, we were not willing to sacrifice my kid’s potential happiness (for increased stress and anxiety). Yes, mine is going to an ivy from base and likely would have had good college admission outcomes regardless where kid went (VERY unique applicant, high stats, research, internships, big awards, and good application presentation) but we didn’t know that 4 years ago. Back then, I only knew I wasn’t willing to put the inevitable stress on a happy, bright kid, even one who likes and excels at STEM.

Kid is still happy, still bright, and HS was pleasant both fo kid and for our household. Just encouraging everyone to look at various angles because all that glitters is not gold.


I think it's common wisdom that if your goal is UVA, then you should probably not go to TJ.
I think it's common wisdom that your GPA is very likely to be lower at TJ than your base school.
I think it's common wisdom that the rigor at TJ will make high school more academically challenging and perhaps more frustrating.

I think it is ALSO common wisdom that going to TJ will prepare you for college in a way that few other places will.
So, if going to the best possible undergrad is your end game then you should probably think long and hard about going to TJ regardless of your ability or enthusiasm.
But if you want to be challenged to meet your academic potential BEFORE you go away to college, then TJ might be the right place for those with high academic ability.

Different families will reach different conclusions depending on the kid.

But if your kid is not a top student getting somewhere around the 99th percentile in standardized tests, TJ may not be for you.


If going to the best possible undergrad is your endgame, you are stuck in a very outdated mentality that is not going to serve you or your kid at all. And you're not guaranteed to get a better outcome from your base school and it might even be worse.


I think it is the opposite: the long game (college) is more important than HS for bright kids. Are you thinking the top base school kids enter college and are floundering? That in a sea of undergraduates, only TJ students (regardless of rank) are the most successful?

UVA is NOT the measuring stick. IF highly ranked colleges are important to your family, then think long and hard about TJ. If you’re the type to worry about things later OR the TJ opportunities are worth it over all else, then go to TJ.

Tons and tons of non tj kids are well prepared for college. It is one of many ways to be prepared for college. Unless we are reading how only TJ grads are college valedictorians and how professors lament having to teach down to all non TJ grads. If so, sources?


College isn’t the long game. The point is that the delta between what you’re getting at TJ versus your base school vastly outpaces the delta between the school you’ll get into with and without TJ. If there even is one.

It is a bad choice to make a decision about what high school to attend based on what college may or may not be accessible from that high school. And I reject the notion that that’s an opinion.


We know. Trust us, we know you think this. You’re still wrong, but keep saying it.

Who can value education so much that TJ is so important but then not value education as much when evaluating colleges?


DP

The error you’re making here is presuming that prestige or selectivity correlates with quality of education. When it comes to college, increasingly it does not.

And further, forward-thinking employers are paying less attention to where you did your undergrad and more attention to demonstrations of your raw skill set… and TJ again creates the bigger delta there by a long shot.


I’m an attorney. We wouldn’t give a crap where you went to HS.


I'm also an attorney. We wouldn't give a crap where you went to college.


Agreed! The most important would be your last place of education and only then until you’ve had a career related full time job placement. Then we are more interested in experience, longevity/why left, etc.

The further back, the less important UNLESS it relates to a connection with the person: I see you went to x college. I did, too!


Exactly - my wife is Mayo Clinic/Hopkins trained surgeon- you would be shocked where she went to college (it's VA and not one people on DCUM even think about for 1s)


Then what’s with people saying going to TJ from 9th-12th helps in job apps? Unless you have no experience or are still in college, why would your HS name/stats still be on your resume? My college sophomore dropped it off the resume half way thru freshman year in college. It clutters the resume up with less relevant/irrelevant info.


It doesn’t help because you get to tell people you went to TJ.

It helps because what you got to do at TJ set you up to have a significantly more advanced experience at whatever college you attended, made you more attractive as a candidate for internships along the way (in some cases even resulting in corporations creating opportunities specifically for you), and set you up to have more immediate success at whatever initial job you end up at because you got to enjoy a greater level of rigor and develop stronger personal habits at an earlier and more formative age.

Never mind the fact that you spent those four *significantly-more-critical-than-college* years surrounded by a supremely bright group of kids that cares about school at a 100% rate.


But if it is tj-grad applicant v. Non-tj-grad applicant up for a job, it comes down to last school attended, stats, and experience.

This is different from posters saying tj was on resume for many years. That’s weird.


Yeah - the delta would come into play in the experience (probably indicated in the cover letter) you mentioned plus the interview. Real companies don’t make decisions entirely on stats anymore - this isn’t 1995.


The job market for new grads or inters sucks. You’re not getting interviews without stats or experience or something specific and narrow (7% disability hires, etc).


Like graduating from a universally acclaimed STEM focused high school.

Appreciate the setup there.


Yeah, employers really want kids who went to TJ. But I do wonder why TJ kids are working in restaurants and stores when they have tried for internships and research.


Because for the first time ever they come from
economically disadvantaged families and actually need to contribute to the family income by getting valuable early work experience in some cases?

Tap out, friend. You’re out of your depth.



Blaming all things (cheating, jobs) that don’t fit your narrative on the lower income TJ kids. That’s gross

Anonymous
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Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
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Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
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Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:One more thing we realized ( parent of TJ kid who went to Wisconsin) is that colleges don’t care about the fact that the kid went to TJ where good grades are so hard to come by.

Basically colleges look at overall GPA and which courses were taken. Thats all.



Do you and your son regret it?


We dont regret it as we dont know what the base experience would have been. But overall TJ years bring back more stress than a 'happy HS memory'.

Kid def says that in College his level of preparation is so much better than 99% of the kids. But again, that's well and good if the kid is actually able to get into the school of their choice.

My son wanted to go to UVA - but was rejected. Maybe from base school he would have made the cut for UVA? Who knows? In the end it worked out well at Wisconsin.


I wanted to share so that parents have the full picture.

The interesting/sad thing is that many parents know this about TJ but STILL get overcome by the TJ Brand Prestige and pressure their kids to go to TJ.


I’ve posted before how we did turn TJ down for a kid and it was not easy at the time. Other friends were admitted and it was hard as a parent- let alone a kid - not to feel the pull about the build up of how great of an opportunity it was going to be (from NON current parents but by parents of rising freshman).

You can’t just say take TJ versus a crapshoot of an ivy admittance from base because:

- TJ likely means (for the majority) a gpa hit. you see the above poster’s kid didn’t even get accepted to uva.

You need to go in with eyes open that it will be a difficult 4 years, long/late nights, dropping grades, long commute and an entirely different HS experience which can change who your kid becomes (good and bad ways).

For us, we were not willing to sacrifice my kid’s potential happiness (for increased stress and anxiety). Yes, mine is going to an ivy from base and likely would have had good college admission outcomes regardless where kid went (VERY unique applicant, high stats, research, internships, big awards, and good application presentation) but we didn’t know that 4 years ago. Back then, I only knew I wasn’t willing to put the inevitable stress on a happy, bright kid, even one who likes and excels at STEM.

Kid is still happy, still bright, and HS was pleasant both fo kid and for our household. Just encouraging everyone to look at various angles because all that glitters is not gold.


I think it's common wisdom that if your goal is UVA, then you should probably not go to TJ.
I think it's common wisdom that your GPA is very likely to be lower at TJ than your base school.
I think it's common wisdom that the rigor at TJ will make high school more academically challenging and perhaps more frustrating.

I think it is ALSO common wisdom that going to TJ will prepare you for college in a way that few other places will.
So, if going to the best possible undergrad is your end game then you should probably think long and hard about going to TJ regardless of your ability or enthusiasm.
But if you want to be challenged to meet your academic potential BEFORE you go away to college, then TJ might be the right place for those with high academic ability.

Different families will reach different conclusions depending on the kid.

But if your kid is not a top student getting somewhere around the 99th percentile in standardized tests, TJ may not be for you.


If going to the best possible undergrad is your endgame, you are stuck in a very outdated mentality that is not going to serve you or your kid at all. And you're not guaranteed to get a better outcome from your base school and it might even be worse.


I think it is the opposite: the long game (college) is more important than HS for bright kids. Are you thinking the top base school kids enter college and are floundering? That in a sea of undergraduates, only TJ students (regardless of rank) are the most successful?

UVA is NOT the measuring stick. IF highly ranked colleges are important to your family, then think long and hard about TJ. If you’re the type to worry about things later OR the TJ opportunities are worth it over all else, then go to TJ.

Tons and tons of non tj kids are well prepared for college. It is one of many ways to be prepared for college. Unless we are reading how only TJ grads are college valedictorians and how professors lament having to teach down to all non TJ grads. If so, sources?


College isn’t the long game. The point is that the delta between what you’re getting at TJ versus your base school vastly outpaces the delta between the school you’ll get into with and without TJ. If there even is one.

It is a bad choice to make a decision about what high school to attend based on what college may or may not be accessible from that high school. And I reject the notion that that’s an opinion.


We know. Trust us, we know you think this. You’re still wrong, but keep saying it.

Who can value education so much that TJ is so important but then not value education as much when evaluating colleges?


DP

The error you’re making here is presuming that prestige or selectivity correlates with quality of education. When it comes to college, increasingly it does not.

And further, forward-thinking employers are paying less attention to where you did your undergrad and more attention to demonstrations of your raw skill set… and TJ again creates the bigger delta there by a long shot.


I’m an attorney. We wouldn’t give a crap where you went to HS.


I'm also an attorney. We wouldn't give a crap where you went to college.


Agreed! The most important would be your last place of education and only then until you’ve had a career related full time job placement. Then we are more interested in experience, longevity/why left, etc.

The further back, the less important UNLESS it relates to a connection with the person: I see you went to x college. I did, too!


Exactly - my wife is Mayo Clinic/Hopkins trained surgeon- you would be shocked where she went to college (it's VA and not one people on DCUM even think about for 1s)


Then what’s with people saying going to TJ from 9th-12th helps in job apps? Unless you have no experience or are still in college, why would your HS name/stats still be on your resume? My college sophomore dropped it off the resume half way thru freshman year in college. It clutters the resume up with less relevant/irrelevant info.


It doesn’t help because you get to tell people you went to TJ.

It helps because what you got to do at TJ set you up to have a significantly more advanced experience at whatever college you attended, made you more attractive as a candidate for internships along the way (in some cases even resulting in corporations creating opportunities specifically for you), and set you up to have more immediate success at whatever initial job you end up at because you got to enjoy a greater level of rigor and develop stronger personal habits at an earlier and more formative age.

Never mind the fact that you spent those four *significantly-more-critical-than-college* years surrounded by a supremely bright group of kids that cares about school at a 100% rate.


But if it is tj-grad applicant v. Non-tj-grad applicant up for a job, it comes down to last school attended, stats, and experience.

This is different from posters saying tj was on resume for many years. That’s weird.


Yeah - the delta would come into play in the experience (probably indicated in the cover letter) you mentioned plus the interview. Real companies don’t make decisions entirely on stats anymore - this isn’t 1995.


The job market for new grads or inters sucks. You’re not getting interviews without stats or experience or something specific and narrow (7% disability hires, etc).


Like graduating from a universally acclaimed STEM focused high school.

Appreciate the setup there.


Yeah, employers really want kids who went to TJ. But I do wonder why TJ kids are working in restaurants and stores when they have tried for internships and research.


Because for the first time ever they come from
economically disadvantaged families and actually need to contribute to the family income by getting valuable early work experience in some cases?

Tap out, friend. You’re out of your depth.



Blaming all things (cheating, jobs) that don’t fit your narrative on the lower income TJ kids. That’s gross



Please show me where I blamed the cheating on the lower-income TJ kids.

Read the words. I did almost the *exact* opposite.

And your use of the word “blaming” indicates that you think it’s somehow “less-than” to work to support your family when needed.

That’s gross.
Anonymous
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Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:One more thing we realized ( parent of TJ kid who went to Wisconsin) is that colleges don’t care about the fact that the kid went to TJ where good grades are so hard to come by.

Basically colleges look at overall GPA and which courses were taken. Thats all.



Do you and your son regret it?


We dont regret it as we dont know what the base experience would have been. But overall TJ years bring back more stress than a 'happy HS memory'.

Kid def says that in College his level of preparation is so much better than 99% of the kids. But again, that's well and good if the kid is actually able to get into the school of their choice.

My son wanted to go to UVA - but was rejected. Maybe from base school he would have made the cut for UVA? Who knows? In the end it worked out well at Wisconsin.


I wanted to share so that parents have the full picture.

The interesting/sad thing is that many parents know this about TJ but STILL get overcome by the TJ Brand Prestige and pressure their kids to go to TJ.


I’ve posted before how we did turn TJ down for a kid and it was not easy at the time. Other friends were admitted and it was hard as a parent- let alone a kid - not to feel the pull about the build up of how great of an opportunity it was going to be (from NON current parents but by parents of rising freshman).

You can’t just say take TJ versus a crapshoot of an ivy admittance from base because:

- TJ likely means (for the majority) a gpa hit. you see the above poster’s kid didn’t even get accepted to uva.

You need to go in with eyes open that it will be a difficult 4 years, long/late nights, dropping grades, long commute and an entirely different HS experience which can change who your kid becomes (good and bad ways).

For us, we were not willing to sacrifice my kid’s potential happiness (for increased stress and anxiety). Yes, mine is going to an ivy from base and likely would have had good college admission outcomes regardless where kid went (VERY unique applicant, high stats, research, internships, big awards, and good application presentation) but we didn’t know that 4 years ago. Back then, I only knew I wasn’t willing to put the inevitable stress on a happy, bright kid, even one who likes and excels at STEM.

Kid is still happy, still bright, and HS was pleasant both fo kid and for our household. Just encouraging everyone to look at various angles because all that glitters is not gold.


I think it's common wisdom that if your goal is UVA, then you should probably not go to TJ.
I think it's common wisdom that your GPA is very likely to be lower at TJ than your base school.
I think it's common wisdom that the rigor at TJ will make high school more academically challenging and perhaps more frustrating.

I think it is ALSO common wisdom that going to TJ will prepare you for college in a way that few other places will.
So, if going to the best possible undergrad is your end game then you should probably think long and hard about going to TJ regardless of your ability or enthusiasm.
But if you want to be challenged to meet your academic potential BEFORE you go away to college, then TJ might be the right place for those with high academic ability.

Different families will reach different conclusions depending on the kid.

But if your kid is not a top student getting somewhere around the 99th percentile in standardized tests, TJ may not be for you.


If going to the best possible undergrad is your endgame, you are stuck in a very outdated mentality that is not going to serve you or your kid at all. And you're not guaranteed to get a better outcome from your base school and it might even be worse.


I think it is the opposite: the long game (college) is more important than HS for bright kids. Are you thinking the top base school kids enter college and are floundering? That in a sea of undergraduates, only TJ students (regardless of rank) are the most successful?

UVA is NOT the measuring stick. IF highly ranked colleges are important to your family, then think long and hard about TJ. If you’re the type to worry about things later OR the TJ opportunities are worth it over all else, then go to TJ.

Tons and tons of non tj kids are well prepared for college. It is one of many ways to be prepared for college. Unless we are reading how only TJ grads are college valedictorians and how professors lament having to teach down to all non TJ grads. If so, sources?


College isn’t the long game. The point is that the delta between what you’re getting at TJ versus your base school vastly outpaces the delta between the school you’ll get into with and without TJ. If there even is one.

It is a bad choice to make a decision about what high school to attend based on what college may or may not be accessible from that high school. And I reject the notion that that’s an opinion.


We know. Trust us, we know you think this. You’re still wrong, but keep saying it.

Who can value education so much that TJ is so important but then not value education as much when evaluating colleges?


DP

The error you’re making here is presuming that prestige or selectivity correlates with quality of education. When it comes to college, increasingly it does not.

And further, forward-thinking employers are paying less attention to where you did your undergrad and more attention to demonstrations of your raw skill set… and TJ again creates the bigger delta there by a long shot.


I’m an attorney. We wouldn’t give a crap where you went to HS.


I'm also an attorney. We wouldn't give a crap where you went to college.


Agreed! The most important would be your last place of education and only then until you’ve had a career related full time job placement. Then we are more interested in experience, longevity/why left, etc.

The further back, the less important UNLESS it relates to a connection with the person: I see you went to x college. I did, too!


Exactly - my wife is Mayo Clinic/Hopkins trained surgeon- you would be shocked where she went to college (it's VA and not one people on DCUM even think about for 1s)


Then what’s with people saying going to TJ from 9th-12th helps in job apps? Unless you have no experience or are still in college, why would your HS name/stats still be on your resume? My college sophomore dropped it off the resume half way thru freshman year in college. It clutters the resume up with less relevant/irrelevant info.


It doesn’t help because you get to tell people you went to TJ.

It helps because what you got to do at TJ set you up to have a significantly more advanced experience at whatever college you attended, made you more attractive as a candidate for internships along the way (in some cases even resulting in corporations creating opportunities specifically for you), and set you up to have more immediate success at whatever initial job you end up at because you got to enjoy a greater level of rigor and develop stronger personal habits at an earlier and more formative age.

Never mind the fact that you spent those four *significantly-more-critical-than-college* years surrounded by a supremely bright group of kids that cares about school at a 100% rate.


But if it is tj-grad applicant v. Non-tj-grad applicant up for a job, it comes down to last school attended, stats, and experience.

This is different from posters saying tj was on resume for many years. That’s weird.


Yeah - the delta would come into play in the experience (probably indicated in the cover letter) you mentioned plus the interview. Real companies don’t make decisions entirely on stats anymore - this isn’t 1995.


The job market for new grads or inters sucks. You’re not getting interviews without stats or experience or something specific and narrow (7% disability hires, etc).


Like graduating from a universally acclaimed STEM focused high school.

Appreciate the setup there.


Yeah, employers really want kids who went to TJ. But I do wonder why TJ kids are working in restaurants and stores when they have tried for internships and research.


Because for the first time ever they come from
economically disadvantaged families and actually need to contribute to the family income by getting valuable early work experience in some cases?

Tap out, friend. You’re out of your depth.



Blaming all things (cheating, jobs) that don’t fit your narrative on the lower income TJ kids. That’s gross



Please show me where I blamed the cheating on the lower-income TJ kids.

Read the words. I did almost the *exact* opposite.

And your use of the word “blaming” indicates that you think it’s somehow “less-than” to work to support your family when needed.

That’s gross.


It’s like you’re compelled to respond to every TJ post that isn’t glowing. How many hours a day are you on doing this?!
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