I didn't mention any of those things because I think they will help him get in. I mentioned them, because I'm looking for a school where that kind of student would be happy and well served. If we move to a program that goes through 12th, I'd like it to be somewhere where he could stay if he likes it, so picking a middle school where the high school would also work for him makes sense. |
Total BS. https://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/uploadedFiles/info/choice/ChoiceStudyReport-Version2-20160307.pdf 26% of applicants to middle school magnets accepted and 37% to high school magnets. OP, you sound either clueless or you're just a braggy jerk. |
PP, I didn't say any private school. I said the most selective private schools, as in Sidwell and the Cathedral Schools. Those are the stats for 9th grade admissions. It's not that difficult to find out. If you are an applicant, the school admissions staff will share how many kids are applying in that year. That's the denominator. If you're connected to the schools, the numerator's easy to find out, too. |
MCPS has completely changed their admissions practices since 2016. |
|
Schools like Sidwell and St Albans have a below 10% acceptance rate and a yield over 90%.
|
Unless you’ve had first had experience working in the admissions offices of multiple “selective” schools locally, I don’t know how you could possibly know that. I am skeptical that admissions rates to any local school is single digits. And repeat after me: selective does NOT equate to quality of education. Selectivity equates to ego inflation. |
TJ is 1% |
Art could be a major part of the school day curriculum. At Potomac there is a whole concentration for it that is done during the school day and the winter athletics block. Look for the visual arts concentration on their website. |
I always thought Potomac was a pressure cooker. During the winter Athletics block is there less of a workload? |
|
So an 11 yr old a STEM student, visual artist and knows academics are not his passion?
|
Probably knows what it is now, but not what it’s going to be in a few years. |
I doubt it. It’s a magnet school that allocates seats to the top 1.5% of 8th graders at public middle schools. That is not the same as rejecting 98.5% because nowhere near every public 8th grader applies. The acceptance rate at TJ from public is about 15-18% and from private is about 15-25% in any given year. The Big 3 MIGHT have admissions rates around 10%, but that is a function of their physical proximity to each other and a large number of people apply to all of them. But no one outside the schools actually knows, since they keep it a secret (and have no incentive to be transparent because they benefit greatly from the perception they are selective). Selective can be an indicator of quality, but it’s not necessarily so. Based on SAT scores and NMS results, there are other “non-Big 3” schools that produce students that are just as strong. |
|
OP, you have described the child, and there are boys like him at literally every school. What you haven't done is describe what you and he want in a school.
What kind of school do you want? |
LMAO. I quickly realized the same thing. Mom it's talking about her fifth grader! And everyone is taking it all seriously, trying to find the right school for the genius future Olympian who is getting ready for his next gallery show. Crazy! |
| Almost every private school lists percentage of students receiving financial aid on its web site. Ot is rarely more than 20 to 25 percent, but that info can help op determine which of the schools she is considering is most generous with aid. Also a bit of a condundrum, more likely to get aid with high school entry but typically easier to get admitted in middle school (or earlier). |