| FCPS average SAT was 77th percentile. The highest its been in the past 5 years is 78th percentile. The lowest its been is 73.5rd percentile (in 2016). I'm not really seeing a meaningful "decline" here. |
Interesting. Please cite your sources over that 5-year period with links. |
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Tests don't matter.
If there is a drop it is only because those evil parents who normally spend thousands on test prep had to spend that money making ends meet when they were downsized at their companies. All we can really measure objectively is how much various students, parents, and stakeholder groups feel about the level of equity and caring in fcps. |
Here's the historical percentiles of SAT percentiles: https://blog.prepscholar.com/historical-percentiles-new-sat FCPS 2020: https://www.fcps.edu/news/fairfax-county-sat-performance-holds-steady-2020 FCPS 2017-2019 https://www.fcps.edu/news/sat-scores-fcps-students-continue-exceed-state-and-national-averages https://www.nvcc.edu/oir/_files/65-17-high-school-profile-fairfax-county-public-schools-2015-16.pdf Missing one year data here--can't find it right now. |
LOL. |
During COVID many SAT test dates were canceled and that impacted the class of 2021. |
Many students in other schools weren't informed about the alternate entry so there were students who had qualifying SI but didn't meet the April deadline. This was a complicated year. Find something else to complain about than the number of NMSF. |
I’d be sleeping with a padlock on my door and one eye open if I were you. Your kid sounds diabolical and not in a good way. |
DP here, what a completely irrelevant response. Go ahead, don't take the SAT or ACT. Continue to believe that the tests are "optional". They said it is so it must be true, right? I've read quite a few articles and listened to podcasts on college admissions since I have two kids going into college in the next 4 years. While the public stance of some schools are that tests are optional, the admission offers indicate that test have become much easier to access so it's a flag for them when a student is missing a test score. I don't doubt some students will get into one of the picky schools without a test score, but those will be the exceptions. |
I don't know if you are being serious with this, but if so, then this reflects rather poorly on you. From my research, AOs don't automatically enjoy sob stories. To automatically "go there" shows that your DD has the wrong view of what it is that colleges value. They don't enjoy reading stories of how a student suffered throughout life and is now looking forward to attending their wonderful school. |
Not PP, but I suspect this was satire to underscore that some schools now seem to place more emphasis on "intangibles" than test scores or other measurements of academic aptitude/achievement. |
+1 People make up these tropes, believe them and then get outraged by them. There are so many incorrect ideas about what will make them competitive. It's counterproductive and PP should be helping her daughter think more realistically rather than on made-up outrage. Selective colleges value 1) Good grades and a challenging courseload 2) high achievement and engagement outside of school and 3) college essays that show good writing and the personal voice of the applicant. High SAT scores can especially be an advantage if the college is less familiar with your school, your school didn't offer a very challenging coursework option, or there are very many students with a high GPA in difficult coursework at your school and it's one more way to stand out. |
Except it's not really true. Which I think this is PP's point. People THINK this is the case, but the data on admitted student profiles shows that on all factors of achievement--GPA, SAT, rigor of courseload, extracurricular achievements etc. selective schools are getting more and more rigorous. Even the selective in-state public schools are getting more selective. |
Thank you. Yes, that’s what DD and I meant. We looked at the common app application preview yesterday, and for some reason race appears in bold. Nothing else like the child’s name or gender or SAT score is in bold. |
The cases brought by the Asian families against the Ivy schools certainly suggests otherwise, but of course this may vary by school. |