Oh yes. Because that kind of attitude is totally specific to DC urban moms and not at all endemic in all major urban/suburban areas in the nation. You really nailed it there. |
Fairfax County Public Schools doesn't rank students anymore and haven't for a while. |
Keep justifying yourself and your warped perspective any way you want. |
| There are many different rankings of area schools every year. It's the passive-aggressive parents who make a big deal about why the rankings must be ignored who make me laugh. Most people just take them in stride. |
Yeah, it's really pretty amusing just how insecure the parents are who live in the unranked or lower ranked HS pyramids. It's gotta be rough knowing that you don't have enough money to live in one of the better HS pyramids and that your children are receiving inferior educations as a result. The bitterness of failure seems to cause people to lash out those around them who are successful. |
I'm sorry, does success entail simply living in a neighborhood that sends ALL age-eligible children in the neighborhood to a school? That's the silliest part of these rankings, and of posts like this one. What kind of success do you think it takes to get your kid into one of these schools? Simply buying a house in the neighborhood? Yup, them's there are real bragging rights. And before you accuse me of being one of those bitter "failures" who can't afford a "better HS pyramid," I should tell you that I'm in one of these "top" pyramids. As I said before, I'll start bragging when my kid gets accepted by a school that actually has admissions standards. |
Wrong! UVA takes kids from lower performing schools with lower scores. A kid from SLHS has a better chance of getting in than a kid from OHS with the same scores. A kid from Richmond has a better chance getting in when compared to a kid from NOVA with the same scores. |
The goal of the US News rankings isn't to provide a parent with bragging rights. The goal is to identify schools that are doing a good job of educating all their students, including their low-income and minority students, and preparing many for college-level courses. If anyone should brag, it should be the school administrators, not a parent, and even then only if they know the ranking is based on correct data. |
So...how did TJ have more than 150 admits to U. Va. last year, while Wakefield only had 8? Attending the lower-performing schools may not be quite the path to admission you imply. |
| Take away the TJ kids and look at the other FCPS schools and compare percentages of kids getting accepted with like scores. Lower scores get in from lower schools. |
| How can the compare test-in schools with non test-in schools? Or are they all test-in schools(TJ is a test-in if I'm not mistaken)? |
If you have a high Asian population - the results are invariable skewed because they are high achieving. Where would TJ be ranked without Asians? |
I know some people would like to suggest you can arbitrage admissions by sending kids to "lower schools" where their scores will "count" for more, but where's the hard data? If only eight Wakefield kids got into U. Va. last year, but over 40 got into Yorktown and W-L, that tells me that either the advantage of attending a "lower school" is not all that great, or that the talent pool at Wakefield is very thin. FWIW, the admissions rate from Wakefield was also appreciably lower as well. I know South Lakes has done great with U. Va. admissions some years, but it would take more than anecdotes to convince most people that sending a kid there, rather than Oakton, is going to give him or her a leg up generally. |
Well in general Asians move to areas with good schools it's not the other way around. |
THANK YOU! |