| Resources are a major factor. Our nearly straight A student started off in the high 60s/low 70s, then we poured time and money into the situation and he ended up in the 90s. We were very fortunate to be able to do both. Not everyone is so fortunate. |
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58 HSPT. Strong grades. Lots of extra-curriculars and sports but likely not competitive at the Catholics.
Accepted to Seton, McNamara, and Good Counsel I'll add that we were hoping for STEM at OLGC and did not make the cut. We focused on test prep for independent schools (ISEE), and spent zero effort preparing for the HSPT. The scores reflected that. She will likely end up at an independent high school. |
As a parent with a dyslexic son coming from a Catholic K-8, I really appreciate this feedback about Gonzaga. |
Nobody is talking about their kids getting a 60%. They are talking about percentile. |
Do you know the cut for STEM at OLGC? |
My kids had pretty bad HSPT scores, 50s and 60s. All As in 8th grade and good recommendations. He got into the only ArchBalt school he applied to. He was placed in all standard (ie, no honors) classes as a 9th grader, I assume because of his HSPT scores, but has thrived and is in all honors classes as a 10th grader. So yeah... for some kids standardized test scores aren't really reflective of their abilities. |
The HSPT score is a percentile. |
SJC admits a lot more than 300. Their 9th grade will be ~300 - so they are probably admitting 500 - 700 to get that class size. (I have no insider info here - just guess at what they might shoot for. |
| Yes. Stone Ridge |
Schools typically accept about 30 kids for every 25 they expect to enroll Likely about no more than 400 accepted to fill the 300 slots. They can then go to the waitlist. Btw 65 hspt accepted to GZ |
| Do kids coming from catholic schools do practice hspt? My DS refused to do anything to practice or even look at the test ahead of time |
We were accepted to SJC- and we got less than 80% on HSPT. Don’t underestimate recommendations and great essays. I do also think it matters which K-8. |
It depends on the school. I know 25+ kids who got into SJC, and only a handful are going. I’m sure there are plenty of kids who absolutely enroll upon acceptance, but for many others SJC is a safety school. |
Not at their K-8, but alot of them take the practice tests the high schools offer before the exam. My ds took one in September or so, and then we got a couple of workbooks from Amazon and he practiced with them. He got a 97% taking the practice test cold. He ended up with a 98% on the real one. |
wow that was so helpful |