Shame on you. You don’t know that’s the case. |
Shame on me? Do you know he had ZERO chance academically before the TJ reform? Might have as well cheated his way in by faking a Hispanic identity (I know many cases already after the TJ reform). I won't be surprised if that's the case. |
This person sounds like a parent whose kid is on the waitlist and trying to discourage kids who already are in. Op- you are asking the right questions. Heck I had no idea about all this when my kid enrolled in TJ. TJ overall is VERY supportive and ur son will glide at the level he is comfortable with. Welcome to TJ! |
This was never the case. The difference is TJ was selecting fewer than ten kids a year at this level, and is now taking more than 100. |
I would suggest trying to find the letter sent by TJ teachers to students complaining about the poor performance of the class. It would give you an idea of the kids who found the math difficult, and then you can see where your kid would fit in compared to this.
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False. I'm a parent of current and former TJ students. Sorry but truth hurts I guess. |
Looking through the TJ flowchart, I have a hard time believing that the standard FCPS summer geometry would properly prepare students for TJ's math courses.
A weaker curriculum, now being taken over a more compressed schedule. |
haha. You're spreading misinformation. At that bottom-of-the-drawer math level, he won't find comfort at TJ at all, even with this significantly watered down environment. |
How do you know this? TJ has had students who took algebra 1 in 8th grade every single year before the latest reforms. |
Yes, but most of them flanked out. |
Of course parents know better and are less biased. Selection committee are appointed by the radical leftist FCPS and TJ principal. What else do you expect from them? |
DP. Sure, but the 8th grade Algebra 1 admits in the past were kids who still did quite well on the TJ tests and had impressive teacher recommendations. Being in Algebra 1 wasn’t disqualifying, but it was a significant negative. In the current process, no weight is given to courses taken, there’s no real test, and there’s no teacher input. A pretty average kid who needed tutors to get As in 8th grade Algebra looks the same in the application as the straight A math star taking pre Calc in 8th. |
Like a PP said, all FCPS middle schools offer Algebra 1. So why didn't they take advance of that opportunity during their middle schools? Or they weren't just capable of? |
The way they use the lack of opportunities as an excuse for inability is getting old. It can only convince the intellectually challenged people. |
This. My oldest attended a Title I school that was neither an AAP center nor a LLIV. The advanced math class still had 5 or so kids who qualified for Algebra in 7th. Also, the middle school was much more likely to let kids take Algebra in 7th who didn't meet the IAAT and SOL benchmarks, but were still somewhat close to qualifying. In FCPS, mathematically gifted kids taking Algebra in 8th due to a lack of access would be exceedingly rare. |