
buy the test from who? Name the fictional seller ![]() |
So sorry your child did not get into TJ. It is ok. Calm down. |
It's well established that prep centers had compiled question banks of the test questions by debriefing students in violation of the NDA in order to rig the process. |
So who was selling the test answers And are NDAs with 12 year olds enforceable or even ethical? If your plan depends on 8000 12 year olds keeping a secret then you have a bad business plan. Quant Q was one of the stupidest ideas out of a large pool of stupid ideas to come out of the FCPS board. |
um, by that twisted logic, the PP would falsely claim any SAT prep class is: “selling the answers to the SAT !!” - which everyone knows is a false claim. The TJ test answers were never for sale, nor are the SAT answers. But there is some nasty troll here in the AAP forum who keeps repeating this false claim. Watch: she will surely do it again in the next TJ thread. |
Not sure about your claims. What is well established is that by the second year of using the Quant Q, there were already $20 Quant Q practice books for sale on Amazon. |
So Amazon is the culprit? Frakking tech bros! |
DP. You sound so desperate try to convince the reader that TJ test answer were never for sale. Majority people understand what it means by that, it is the TJ test prep. It is what it is. |
Wait. You are saying that TJ test prep = "TJ test answers were for sale" You think those two phrases are synonymous? And you think the PP sounds desperate? |
When you are sign up for $$ program so called TJ test prep, you would expect a program that “Prep” you to the test to TJ admission, nothing else. The “preparation” off course 100% grind your kid to practice what the TJ test looks like, not something else, and off course they have the history of TJ test material, regardless how they obtained it. They modified the similar pattern of questions to practice. Buyer pay them for that, nothing else. And that is how you sounds more desperate by making me say the detail. Most reader here are aim for TJ, or TJ related, and they are intelligent enough to understand this petty matter. |
Children cannot execute enforceable contracts in the U.S., so there is no NDA. |
Your twisted logic makes no sense. If TJ had released past test questions, students with no real interest in STEM still wouldn’t apply—just as we see with AP exams. AP Calculus BC past questions are freely available online, not leaked by Curie students but leaked by college board students, yet only about 1.5% of high school students choose to take on the challenge to learn basic calculus. Khan Academy, YouTube, $20 prep books on Amazon, and countless tutoring centers all recycle these same questions. If all these free and low price resources are accessible, what’s really stopping the other 98.5% from putting in the effort to tackle STEM courses like calculus? https://apcentral.collegeboard.org/courses/ap-calculus-bc/exam/past-exam-questions |
And that makes what the test prep centers did ok |
what prep centers did is a fictional tale with no proof. Besides that what TJ should have done before and should do now is release all past year questions just like college board does for all AP exams. URMs and FARMS benefit the most, and all students who have interest in learning and prepping stem. |
That could never work. |