I do not know why posters are mocking this. It is very close to correct: 90th %ile is about 120 IQ, is too low for gifted and talented programs and is a little above the average IQ (85th %ile) of our local UMC public school and a little below the average IQ of the local private. They give the parents all the CTP testing data. 99.9 is 147-150, about or 1 in 1200 people. 99.99 is 157++ and is hard to test; the ceiling of the normal tests is around 99.9. True 99.99 are rare 1 in 11, 000 So yes 90%ile IQ about 120 and 99.99 about 160 is indeed about 40 points. It is a vast difference as far as what they are capable of. I am in the gifted and talented field and spouse is a professor who has taught at many schools—the IQ/talent level of the average student matters a LOT and 40 points is a huge deal, even 20 points (120 vs 140) is a large range. |
That is not that common to bump that far. 50-70 points is the average bump even with prep. There are plenty of kids who get 99%ile and higher on every standardized test they have ever taken. Most kids at the top colleges are in this group. There are a lot of 99%ile kids (who always have been). |
Which public school is this? Is it local? I am surprised average is that high. We are in MCPS (one of the W clusters). |
And then you have kids from the few private schools who don't give As, and they have mostly Bs but 1550 SATs. So where to they fit into OP's analysis? |
I think you are underestimating your kid. Sounds like the high school is rigorous and grades tough. College will be easier, as long as the kid is a good writer. |
Also a 1350 on the new digital adaptive test means the student did not make it into the harder sections, right? |
[b]middle of the 1500s first try, before 11th--&plenty got higher, earlier. Plenty took it a couple times to get the 1500. There are usually minor differences between those groups but they are close. 1350 superscore, is a different group entirely |
You are correct, they could not. You see the difference because you have two kids who are different yet seem "close" to someone who does not know. The 97th%ile is bottom 1/4 to 1/3 student at a top college, AND their grades are likely below average at their prep school where most likely far less than half get into ivy/plus. You get that and are acting accordingly and will find a great school one tier lower where they will thrive. It is the parents who have the kid at the easy public getting A and A- (thus not top 10%) and the same or lower percentile on SAT who do not have a clue what the typical kid at the ivy will be. They do not grasp what a 99th+ %ile is and how far above it is from their own kid. |
First, those private schools do give As to a few kids in each section. Second the AOs know the rigor of the high schools especially “known” privates: the 1550 who also has a bunch of 5s and 4s but is top 25% not top 10% still get into the top schools. The one we know well sends 30% to ivy-plus. So plenty of the kids who have Bs go to ivy plus. High school matters. |
Before! |
Incorrect. The easier section caps around 620/630. A 1350 means they did get the harder module. |
DP: I just looked up my kid's high school and my own high school (current SAT not 1994) and they are in different counties in central virginia which are known for having good public high schools, both send a chunk of kids off to Maggie Walker Governor's school after 8th grade and yet have SAT average of 1260 and 1280, both above the 85th percentile. I know it is not IQ per se, but this is the average SAT after a couple dozen of the top students leave the county system for Maggie. My guess is there are many such schools around the country. |
Those "poverty kids" don't NEED to go to a top school to escape poverty. They'll do just fine if they go to a state flagship. That was in fact the original purpose of state universities. And at a state flagship they won't encounter super-rich kids who will cause feelings of class envy and resentment. The purpose of top schools is to educate the brightest kids in the nation. If those kids are from an "affluent, privileged" background, so be it. |
+100 we had the opposite...the 93rd/95th%ile made the gifted program, a very smart kid, transferred to top private in 9th and just missed top 20% society thing, school seemed filled with smarties. Then 7 yrs later realized the second one ,99%ile+ was in a completely different tier, has cruised through high school and is at the very top. First one UVa ED, loved it and thrived! Second one is applying now and aiming for top10 but will be fine with UVA. |
What is ironic is PP complains that poor kids are not at top schools: more than 50% are on need based financial aid at top schools now, and lots of Pell grant and fully aided kids are there. The top schools are not "filled" with rich. There is more financial and racial diversity at the ivies than there is at UGA. And yet the SAT/ACT scores are still a lot higher at the ivies. |