Yes that's why we are trying to leave. |
It's percentile, not percentage. |
Don't give up hope. My kid is just as you described (except not Catholic), and was accepted to both GC and SJC... and now gets all A's and one or two B's. |
My DC with dyscalculia got time 1.5 and a calculator and was able to write her test ansers in the book rather than fill in bubbles. It was a GAME CHANGER. |
Must not be Catholic schools. Many of them have grade deflation. |
Yes, I’m actually referring to 2 catholic schools. |
Thanks, pp. Was that recently? My understanding is that the mass exodus from area public schools has prompted a dramatic influx of applications to GC and SJC specifically. Both schools apparently have larger freshman classes this year because more students accepted than the schools had anticipated…and that means the schools are likely to admit fewer students this time around. |
Current sophomore, so we were going through the admissions process two years ago. There were a lot of applicants then too (I want to say it was around 900-1,000 for 300 spots at both schools). |
Thx! I’m hearing roughly the same in terms of # of applicants and slots. |
Are there prep classes specifically for kids with learning differences? |
I used a private tutor for my ADHD kid. The one on one attention was great and tutor could adapt to just hit the areas the kid needed. No zoning out. |
Last year it was over 1,200 applicants for 300 spots and they wound up over enrolling by about 10%. |
How are y’all learning these stats? Is this information about the number of applicants verses the number of accepted students …is it in the acceptance letter when your kid gets in? I’m like, how do people know this? |
Admissions officers share this info if you ask questions during the open house or tours. My biggest takeaway is that most seats are essentially earmarked for siblings, athletes, and a balance for gender and race. And for catholic HS, there is some sort of wink-wink/nod-nod to ensure kids coming from parochial schools land somewhere. This means your white kid from a public school or even non-catholic private has a small chance of getting in. |
| I'm personally glad the Catholic schools prioritize those of us who have put our kids through Catholic school K-8. We've sacrificed and made Catholic education a priority and I'm glad the schools recognize this and want these kids in their schools. |