Here is an uncomfortable reality -> plumbers, electricians, HVAC techs, etc. will still be working long after your office job as been reduced to a handful of RPAs and a chatbot (or outsourced to equally capable engineers overseas) Chew on that along with your popcorn. And the fact that you couldn't pay with your phone and /or plastic tells me you are too far behind the curve to keep up. |
You know, popcorn's really hard to throw up. Are you sure Larlx should be eating it? Maybe give them some ice cream. |
Not the PP but there sure is a lot of Blair envy in here... |
Only in your own mind. The one that thinks going to a high school with 3,000 kids sounds fun. |
The ones whose cubs were rejected are obsessed and setting with it. |
|
Bringing this back on topic.
TPMS is worth it based on the what your home MS is. As others have pointed out, Frost/CJ/Pyle etc have great cohorts as well and the commute needed to get to TPMS might make it not worth it for you. We had our older go through TPMS and they loved it. Challenging curriculum and great cohort of friends. Our younger missed the lottery this year and went to our local MS. The big difference is the lack of academic rigor of the "magnet" subjects and the variety of clubs that TPMS offers that we sorely miss |
|
Well this is super crazy.
First of all, tons of houses zoned for Blair cost upwards of $1 million, so I'm really not sure where it makes any sense to call people "poor" here. I'm also not sure how or why it's ok to angrily jab at people for having less money than people in Bethesda or Potomac. YIKES. Not a good look. Second, living in bounds for TPMS or Blair does not, in any way, guarantee admission to a magnet. It didn't with the old process, and it certainly doesn't now. Does it make people feel better to think it does? Even with great test scores, perfect grades, and a great kid, that kid is nowhere near sure to get a slot in any MCPS magnet. Third, Wootton is spelled without an "e." Fourth, god you people are awful. |
TPMS has in boundary set aside for 25 kids in addition to the 100 who are bussed in. Of course, there's no guarantee especially with the lottery no matter how smart your kid is but their odds are much better living in boundary. |
They are tremendously better! But realize there are 25 spots for 400+ kids, probably 1/3 of whom are academically capable and a good fit for the opportunity. And I expect those will go away in some time. |
Doubt those seats are going anywhere and there are more like 250-300 kids and only the top 15% are considered so your odds are more like 25/45. |
At last count TPMS had 405 students in 6th grade with a total enrollment of 1,162. You may be thinking of TPES/Piney Branch, but there's also ESS, an entire school, that fees into it. While there are a BUNCH of highly educated and affluent families in bounds, there are just as many families that are not (it's a 40% FARMS school which is on metric that tracks to this stuff pretty consistently). The pool isn't top 15%: it's something like "if you make it into the top 15th percentile for MCPS" which is probably more at TPMS, but I'm not even sure it's that. Still, odds are better than literally any other school (particular of you are coming from the TPES/PBES route, statistically) but it's not a 25/45 chance. Not even close. |
We were a TPMS magnet family. Zoned for TPMS. And for Blair. TPMS was awful. We went private for the rest of middle school and RMIB for high school. Things change, but it's not the crazy sparkling unicorn you all make it out to be. |
Wow! We have experience with TPMS Magnet, Blair Magnet and also at non-magnet middle schools. Pre-lottery. TPMS Magnet has some dedicated teachers. Blair STEM has a great student cohort - hopefully, it remains the same. We did explore private but wanted the diversity for our kids. Right or wrong decision - who knows. |
All I know a few years back my neighbor was bummed when their child didn't get into the local CES @PBES with a 97% national score on the CogAT. |
So of the 400 8th graders 300 are in-boundary and eligible for one of the set aside seats. 100 of those 400 8th graders are magnet kids from out of boundary. |