Parent of an HB grad and grads from other APS High schools. Placement at HB is absolutely better than at WL. But the kids aren't 'better' - you could take an HB kid with a WL kid who both have the same profile and the HB kid will win out each time. HB and college placements are living off the legacy and reputation of having graduated from HB. They aren't better, just living off their laurels. And I would argue that my kids who graduated from the other APS school had more rigor in some academic courses than my HB kid. More choices, better instruction. Don't get me wrong, HB was great for my kid who was 'quirky'. But there are not as many quirky kids as people think there compared to kids who would do well anywhere. |
This doesn’t apply though, does it? HB is a program, and as such everything, including your diploma, lists your geographical high school, doesn’t it? |
From experience, OP - HBW is a kind and accepting place. You will do well if you are self motivated. You will not do well if you are less self motivated, and tend to fall off track, and need more supervision/direction.
I hope this actually answers your question, because I am sick and tired of the posts who pretend to know, but quite obviously do not. |
Colleges absolutely know if you went to HB or not. |
HB has better placement that a student in the IB program at WL?? Completely false. |
I’m the parent of two HB grads and two neighborhood school grads. Yes, colleges know if you’re attending the HB program. No, HB isn’t less of a pressure cooker than the neighborhood schools academically - there’s tremendous pressure at HB to load up on AP classes. No, all things being equal, it’s not to a kid’s advantage in college admissions to attend HB. If you have the same classes, the same grades, and the same test scores one school is view equally to the other.
What distinguishes HB from the neighborhood schools is the social scene. That’s really about it. |
That is quite the life hack. IB works you like a sweatshop, but coasting at HBW with less rigorous course options, and you get almost the same placement. Now I see why knives are out for HBW Admittance! |
Why exactly is it “patently unfair” for HB kids to play sports at their home high schools? As another poster points out, it truly is such a small number of kids who do this. And who are you to judge what is, or isn’t, a valid reason for choosing HB? |
Well my DC is at HB only because they moved off the waitlist for a 9th grade slot when two of the kids who got in ahead of them opted instead to go to W-L for the IB program (base school was Yorktown), and I know of at least two kid who left HB after middle school to go to W-L for the IB program so I don't think everyone shares your opinion. I love HB and I wish parents would advocate to replicate the model, rather than tearing it down in the vein of "if I can't have nice things, no one should have them." This is the same issue I had with those parents who fought against building a fourth comprehensive high school unless it had a swimming pool and fields and all the other bells and whistles. They argued to the school board that everyone should suffer equally rather than have some kids go to a high school without a pool. I was at that school board meeting and some of those parents were really vocal that that APS should not build a new high school unless it had all the same features of the other three -- never mind the lack of land for such a thing. My observation is that basically parents are wholly self-interested. They don't give a damn about school options until after their kid doesn't get into HB. Then they complain about how unfair it is and want to get rid of HB, and the most vocal people are the ones who applied and didn't get in, so clearly they didn't have a problem with it when they applied. You don't see a bunch of parents of first graders working to get more high school options, and I never hear parents whose kids didn't apply to HB complain about it. Basically they don't even think about it. |
Well my DC is at HB only because they moved off the waitlist for a 9th grade slot when two of the kids who got in ahead of them opted instead to go to W-L for the IB program (base school was Yorktown), and I know of at least two kid who left HB after middle school to go to W-L for the IB program so I don't think everyone shares your opinion. I love HB and I wish parents would advocate to replicate the model, rather than tearing it down in the vein of "if I can't have nice things, no one should have them." This is the same issue I had with those parents who fought against building a fourth comprehensive high school unless it had a swimming pool and fields and all the other bells and whistles. They argued to the school board that everyone should suffer equally rather than have some kids go to a high school without a pool. I was at that school board meeting and some of those parents were really vocal that that APS should not build a new high school unless it had all the same features of the other three -- never mind the lack of land for such a thing. My observation is that basically parents are wholly self-interested. They don't give a damn about school options until after their kid doesn't get into HB. Then they complain about how unfair it is and want to get rid of HB, and the most vocal people are the ones who applied and didn't get in, so clearly they didn't have a problem with it when they applied. You don't see a bunch of parents of first graders working to get more high school options, and I never hear parents whose kids didn't apply to HB complain about it. Basically they don't even think about it. +1000 spot on, all of it |
I’ve never met a parent in real life who was actually mad that their kid didn’t get a spot at HB or thought the fix was in. Typically parents just laugh it off if their lottery number is bad and just move on. There are lots of different programs and paths in Arlington. My friends’ kids are all over the place with immersion and Arlington Tech and IB and athletics - HB is great, but so are the many other options. |
Your calculation of the odds of siblings both getting in is completely wrong, in no small part due to some faulty assumptions. Parents whose older children did not get into HB are less likely than the average parent to enter their younger children in the lottery due to the hassles of having kids in different high schools, and parents who didn’t enter their older children into the lottery at all are even less likely to enter their younger children. That means the self-selecting pool of lottery applicants has a disproportionate number of students with older siblings already at HB. Also, your data is wrong because the average allocation per elementary school is 3 spaces, not 2, and the average total number of 5th graders is 83, not whatever number you were trying to type. If 35 kids apply for those three slots and 4 of them have older siblings at HB, there is a nearly 1 in 3 chance that at least one sibling of an older HB student will also get in. |