You know, the biggest drawback I see right now is the administration at TJ. The principal doesn’t want the teachers to spend time writing recommendations. And this is a major problem. |
The education at TJ has been amazing though. My child has been very happy there. |
DC got in TJ, AOS and AET, has strong interest in robotics...any suggestions on which school would be better? |
My child is attending Ivy Prep. They teach nutritional content of food so they are able to make educated choices. |
TJ for sure. |
From what I heard. AET/AOS has some very excellent teachers. One of my friend's kid goes to AET and the other friend's kid goes to TJ. THe kid who goes to AET was not liking the math and science in middle school, but once he got into AET, the teachers are so fantastic that he loves math and science. In TJ, kids are on their own and they need to learn on their own. Finally we all go for learning. So teachers matter.
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Is this true? Why TJ parents/students are not doing something about this issue? |
Second that. Most of the TJ kids have to take extra tutoring. |
The whole US school system itself is rigged. People from rich neighborhoods have better schools because the kids can afford to have extra help to get better and hence property value increases and hence attracts more wealthy people. The poorer neihborhoods will go the other way for the same reason and go worse and worse.
Same thing with TJ and even with AET, AOS too. Since only students of those caliber are coming, teachers need not do much. The parents and students will one way or the other, make sure that they get good grades from parents or external help. I do not think that TJ, AET or AOS has any kids that come from a poor family, since they cannot afford to tutor for the selection exams. So in short the rating of the school is high because they chose to have the best kids in that place. A school will be great if the teachers can do something to enhance the capacity of kids in need. |
Is this true? If the teachers don't write recommendations, then won't it affect exmissions, which then reflects badly on the principal. |
Recently without any public review or board approval AOS/AET changed their admission criteria. They removed PSAT and SOL score requirements. Reason given in one of the meeting was that PSAT test needs preparation and helps certain class of students. Instead AOS/AET want to use CCTDI tests.
Removing PSAT test means diluting the admission criteria. Hence future quality of AOS/AET is questionable. It is may be better to send kids to TJ, which has fine tuned its admission criteria over the time but still attracts students that are intelligent and also can work hard. |
Do you honestly believe the bolded or are you just annoyed because you've paid for PSAT prep for your kid? |
Hello,
My kid got into AOS and TJ and we are trying to figure it out. Any thoughts or insights are appreciated. |
I believe that TJ is better school. There a much larger variety of STEM courses at TJ compared to AOS. |
Hi,
I am trying out for AOS, and what type of essay do they give? |