This is true all TJ students will not have the same profile but the question was given everything is the same if the tj student perform better than other high schools colleges will not admit that student due to the number of total students from TJ. I don't think colleges don't accept that student because they have a quota from that school instead they might have a better candidate form other schools. |
And the last class to suffer admission caps at the T10 now that TJ has a clear DEI message. |
Starting next year, my expectation is that TJHSST acceptance to the top schools will fall significantly (but still be much better than McLean Hs and Langley HS) because relatively lower standardized test scores will offset any university DEI admission factors. |
You are predicting next year's SAT average at TJ will be much lower than recent years? Easy enough to check. Come back next year and tell us. |
| I was appalled recently when I observed a contingent of TJ kids. Extremely arrogant and smug. I am glad to hear colleges are repelled by these students. Good for them. |
Not the PP but they are probably basing this on very low PSAT scores from the bottom of the TJ class this year. Maybe they will apply TO. The top of the class is still doing well and competitive for T10 schools. |
DP. FCPS won’t publish this so someone would have to file a FOIA request. Given how deeply embedded DEI is in many elite schools, non-Asian minority candidates from TJ in the class of 2025 will probably do great, even if the overall academic gap between TJ and Langley/McLean/Chantilly/Oakton continues to narrow. |
I’m sure that’s the case for some kids - as it would be almost at any school - but I haven’t noticed that among the two extracurriculars DC does there. |
Yeah I think someone posted that the PSAT average dropped by over 100 points for the first DEI class. |
The drop is irrelevant. TJ will still have the same top students with high scores going to the T10 but now will also have students with excellent DEI factors, including an essay on getting through TJ despite being poor, not Asian/white, etc. |
Oh the drop is relevant but just not to college admissions. I fully expect the experience factors to continue to propel these new students to great admissions results. |
You’re missing the fact that more of the top students will be at their base schools rather than TJ, so the quota kids can attend TJ. |
Yep. As a result, I predict average test scores at TJ will continue to fall while average test scores at Langley, McLean, Oakton, and Chantilly will continue to rise. And as the gap narrows, parents won’t feel the same desire/incentive to send their kids across the county to TJ, so fewer and fewer gifted kids will go to TJ and will remain with their local school district. |
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Instead of implementing DEI-based quotas at TJHSST, they should have created another TJHSST elsewhere in Northern Virginia. Given the population growth in this area, there are more than enough gifted students, and there is more than enough demand among parents, for a second STEM-focused high school in the area.
With all the population growth around the metro lines, why has no one thought to put a Governor’s high school or another STEM-focused high school next to a metro station? Now would seem the time to do that, while land is still available adjacent to the silver line stations. That sure beats some casino or stadium. |
Have to work that victimhood and play the racial identity politics card. It is pathetic, really. |