?? I haven't posted in this thread until the above posting. 1 kid at TJ. I love the "#we came for the sports" vibe of TJ athletics and think it's a great non-academic outlet for the kids there. |
| At TJ, plenty of good athletes have good grades. Actually it is possible to be the top athlete of the country and have top grade, see Brandon Kim. But that requires A LOT of talent and dedication, each student and each family is different. What I have seen at TJ, a lot of academically strong kids are also do well in extracurricular activities. It is very hard with TJ's rigor, but those kids are willing to work hard and give it all. |
There are a few. There is a recruitable fencer that is a junior this year. A recruitable soccer player. A recruitable tennis player. And I am sure there are a bunch more that I am not aware of. |
Fine, but TJ students report that TJ is more challenging than Princeton, or any other Ivy for that matter. The two exceptions are MIT and Caltech and that's it. |
Man, you're all over the place here... 1) No one is arguing that it's "sports-focused", and yet the sports experience there is pretty damn solid and they usually win more championships than just about anyone else in the area. 2) It's not mostly recreational unless you're talking about the running sports, and even those win district titles with regularity. 3) Turns out the vast majority of TJ kids are "good with academics". 4) There aren't many TJ students sitting on a ton of Cs and Ds. |
A Division 1 baseball player who has already committed to an Atlantic 10 school! |
If you drop below a 3.0, I think they send you back to base. |
Do they now? How many? It would need to have four things happen for your statement to be remotely considered: - kids graduated from tj - kids attend an ivy - the “kids” referenced above are a large enough number to be considered reliable (not a handful of kids)- many from each individual school - the “kid” referenced above all reported their academic comparison to the above poster Having A former TJ grad here or there tell A former TJ classmate something is not what helps evaluate if something is true. My guess is the prior poster asked 1 person “how does it compare to TJ’s rigor” and the kid mumbled back something which the poster took as gospel. This is the fake TJ stuff that waters down TJ’s appearance in the eyes of others. |
Princeton can absolutely be harder if you want it to be. |
Credible source? |
The person who replied here betrays that they aren’t very connected with TJ. It’s a matter of common knowledge among TJ grads that (again, except for MIT and Caltech) college is always easier than TJ. Simply belonging to one of the TJ alumni Facebook groups would take care of this for you. And yes, it follows for Ivies as well. Stanford too. You can keep arguing the point, but all that makes you is loud and wrong. |
Sure, and so can many other schools. But it isn’t just by itself. |
| For those with sports as priority, base school is the way to go, where calculus is not required. |
DP Sports are popular at TJ. About half the students participate in school sports. |
May not be required but many kids do Calc (and beyond), no matter the school, no matter if an athlete. |