Nobody bought test answers. If you have to lie to make your point then maybe you don't have much of a point. |
DP. Reposting what we do know about the TJ test prep scandal... There was enough concern in the community about test prep companies "cracking the test" that they changed the test/process multiple times over the years. Affluent families who could afford these programs were buying their kids an unfair advantage in admissions. In fact, back in 2017 the SB switched to quant-q, which intentionally didn’t share prep, in an effort to reduce this unfair advantage. https://www.washingtonian.com/2017/04/26/is-t...rfax-discrimination/ “ “Is it gonna once again advantage those kids whose parents can pay to sign them up for special prep camps to now be prepping for science testing as well?” Megan McLaughlin [FCPS School Board] asked when presented with the new plan. Admissions director Jeremy Shughart doesn’t think so. The firm that markets the math portion of the test, Quant-Q, doesn’t release materials to the public, a practice that should make them harder for test-prep schools to crack.” TJ students and others have publicly acknowledged the unfair advantage that money can buy and that test prep companies have a "cache of previous and example prompts". https://www.tjtoday.org/23143/showcase/the-children-left-behind/ “ Families with more money can afford to give children that extra edge by signing them up for whatever prep classes they can find. They can pay money to tutoring organizations to teach their children test-taking skills, “skills learned outside of school,” and to access a cache of previous and example prompts, as I witnessed when I took TJ prep; even if prompts become outdated by test changes, even access to old prompts enables private tutoring pupils to gain an upper edge over others: pupils become accustomed to the format of the writing sections and gain an approximate idea of what to expect.” TJ students admitted that they shared quant-q test questions with a test prep company or they saw nearly identical questions on the test. https://www.facebook.com/tjvents/posts/pfbid0jKy4hotXF8AxKwfHm2MAVi7e2yYoCqtrTTXPYsszAdQg6uMoTmReMidqyM1mpu9Bl Examples of various test prep companies harvesting test questions and sharing with others. https://katedalby.com/get-tj-update/ The math required for the test is basic math, algebra, and geometry. In the past, we have used old SAT tests from 30 years ago augmented with select problems to mimic the Quant Q. In order to adapt to the changes, we will increase the number of permutation and combination problems in response to students’ observations about the math last fall. https://www.optimaltjprep.com/ ““M. said that the math questions were very similar to the challenge problems she did with you in classes.” - C.R. (Mother, after 2018-19 test) “E. said that the math questions were very close to what she did with you during the last 2 sessions. To quote her exactly: 'Dr, Tripathi's math problems were dead on point.' We really appreciate your help with her preparation for the test!” - L.R. (Father, after 2017-18 test)” Many videos showing how to solve actual SIS math questions on TJ admissions tests: https://www.youtube.com/@katedalbysinspiringtestpre864/videos https://www.youtube.com/@EduAvenuesTJTestPrep https://www.youtube.com/@principiatutorsconsultants4395/videos Kids from affluent families who attend these test prep programs have an unfair advantage. The test prep companies are constantly trying to "crack the test". They ask students to share details/questions about the tests and then share that info with other students. |
Just stop. Most of this complaining is parents mad that their children have lost their advantage and other children from less advantaged families who are just as smart, and sometimes even smarter, now have the opportunity for an education that can possibly change their lives. There are a lot of parents who want that TJ magnet on their car and are mad that they can no longer pay a test prep company to get it. |
The majority of 8th graders taking Honors Algebra II have taken Honors Geometry over the summer between 7th and 8th grade online. |
I am the DP who posted these details earlier in the thread. Someone else copied & pasted them again here today, apparently misrepresenting themselves as me. |
That is insane. Truly the race to nowhere for these kids. |
Pushing your kids to take outside enrichment classes and activities beyond their interest level is gaming the system. When enough parents started doing it, FCPS had to change the process to keep the admissions process fair to all kids. FCPS wanted kids who were sincerely interested in STEM, not kids who were forced on that path by their parents. So, yes, those pushy parents ruined it for everyone. |
You misunderstand. By studying, she means buying access to the test questions with the intent of gaming the selection process. |
So...nobody bought the test answers. Nobody cheated. Some kids studied more than others. Kids who study are always going to have an advantage over kids that do not study. Trying to hide the test like they did with quant q only makes the test less available to those without resources. Just use the PSAT. It is widely understood and has a lot of free support online. |
I wish they'd do something like this because TJ selection is just too hard to game these days at least compared to the old system where you could purchase the question bank from a prep center. |
#fakenews - Cheating was so widespread they had to change the entire process. |
If affluence determined test scores then we wouldn't see charts like this: https://satsuite.collegeboard.org/media/pdf/sat-percentile-ranks-gender-race-ethnicity.pdf In fairfax, whites have higher incomes and wealth than asians and yet asian kids outperform their white peers. Contrary to popular belief asians do not make more than whites. Asians make more per household than whites and are more likely to have multiple income households. Asians also tend to live in higher cost-of-living areas. But in any given area, whites still make more than asians. The fact of the matter is that kids from some cultures study more than kids from other cultures. A kid that studies more has a significant advantage over kids that study less when it comes to anything academic. Studies from California show that asian and black students that spend similar time studying achieve similar math scores. Same with asian students compared to white students. Studying is more encouraged and supported in asian communities than in other communities so maybe you can say that being asian provides a cultural advantage but as long as asian kids study harder (regardless of the reason for their studying), they will continue to be higher achieving academically and dissuading studying is counterproductive to civilization. Asians should think hard before they tell themselves they are "winning" at anything Their kids are working more and getting less recognition for their efforts. They are getting paid less for the same jobs in the same locale. They aren't better than anyone else, they are just working harder and that work takes a toll. |
Do you have any evidence for this? At my office most of the high paying jobs are held by Asians, despite being a minority. |
Only if you define "cheating" as "studying for the test". |
PP There's definitely smart kids from poor backgrounds that will not be able to test into TJ that might have done so if their parents were rich. This is not new or surprising especially with recent immigrants. This is the generational nature social mobility. You do the best you can given the circumstance you find yourself and provide better opportunities for your kids. If the point of TJ is to "meet the needs of a small population of students whose learning levels are remarkably different from their age-level peers" then we are taking the children as they are not as we think they might have been if only they had spent the first 14 years of their life in some McLean McMansion. 95% of students attend base schools and if the notion is that the kids who have studied hard and achieved high levels of academic ability "will be fine" going to a base school then so will the kids that didn't study hard and didn't achieve high levels of academic ability. TJ isn't an end goal, it is a boot camp and by taking unqualified kids we are seeing very high wash out rates and a lot of kids scraping along too proud to go back to their base school where they would be pulling straight As. |