So most of the class of TJ goes to UVA, Virginia Tech, and William and Mary. 14 to MIT is impressive. Does one have to be a VA resident to test in/apply for TJ ? Can you live in the District and apply/test in for TJ or do you have to live in VA? |
You need to reside VA (Fairfax Count or one of its surrounding counties) to be eligible for admission to TJ. |
Which is why I can never figure out why there is one (or two?) poster who continually brings up TJ on this board. It's a great school if you (1) live in northern VA, (2) have a child who is high school age, (3) said child is REALLY into STEM subjects, and (4) said child tests very well. For the rest of us, it isn't an option. I couldn't choose TJ over St. Albans - my child doesn't qualify on (1) or (3). |
Students with mastery of mathematics, physics and computer science who test well at the top of the pack are incredibly smart. |
Other news from the Department of the Obvious: the surface of the sun is incredibly hot. |
Sweetheart, APs are in 2 weeks. Go back to your room and study. Love, Mom P.S. Even though you rock the STEM classes, you are still going to have to meet the foreign language requirement in college, so you might want to crack open that "501 Verbs in Espanol" that we bought 4 years ago. ![]() |
Oh well, THAT is not going to happen. Do you have to reside in the couny to take the admissions exam ( assuming that there is one) ? |
Yes, there is an admission test. And, most probably you need to reside in one of the eligible counties to be able to apply (as oppose to planning to move to the county if DC is admitted), but I am not 100% sure. You may want to contact TJ admission office for a more accurate answer. |
And it has to be the student's primary residence, not some apartment you rent just to qualify while you actually live in maryland. People have tried this ruse. |
really, what would I do without you pointing this out being that I was born yesterday and all. Gee, thanks. I don't think we'll move to the edge of oblivion ( the outer loop) just to qualify to take the TJ admissions exam. Thanks anyway. |
Maybe it wasn't you, Mayor McSnark, but one or more posters were asking eligibility questions. Calm down, nobody's asking you to move to the hinterlands of . . . northern Virginia. (And you do know DC is a cow town compared to NYC anyway, right?) |
TJ is not a private school. This is the private school forum. |
Eeeewwww, a public school! Eeeeekkkkk! *clutches pearls* NP here. Seriously, though. For parents who are focused on exmissions, which unfortunately seems to be a significant (at least 10%?) percentage of private school parents, the outcomes at this public school are relevant information. |
I used to work in admissions at a small, selective liberal arts school. The name gets thrown around here quite a bit. The posters who want to know what happens with the middle of the class is thinking in the right direction.
What is often not discussed on these boards is what happens with the bottom third of the class at these schools. The top third is fine. They are getting into Ivies and other top schools. The middle third usually ends up at other good-ish (by DCUM standards) selective schools. That bottom third ends up all over the place and it usually isn't great. The college counselors at schools (StA's is in that bunch) would call us practically begging on some of the students, but we can always tell who is at the bottom of a class. Selective schools get somewhat snobby when independent schools try to push their bottom third on them and usually WL or flat out deny those students. For example, a school like Davidson may WL StA's top boy bc they know he is a double Harvard legacy and his record is Strong enough to get in, so he isn't coming to Davidson. It isnt worth wasting an admit on that student. Then, they admit the kid in the middle third who is strong and has expressed high interest. When the kid in the bottom third applies, they have to deny him since they did not admit the top boy. Even if they need another boy, they will take him from another school at that point so that decisions seem somewhat consistent within a single school community. If I had a child who was average, by the standards of a school like StA, I would send him elsewhere. Probably public, because it is not worth the cost if the child won't even end up at a top school. Save the money to give to the child for graduate school. |
Thanks, PP. I've gone through the college admissions process with my DC from a "Big 3" and what you have stated was our experience. DC was in the top third of her class. DC2 is at STA. From reviewing STA's matriculation lists for the last several years and also from being acquainted with some of the families/boys who have shared their grades, test scores, backgrounds, etc., their admissions process (acceptances/rejections) is consistent in what we've experienced and what you stated. |