TJ Class of 2017 College Destination List

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Admissions to prestigious schools is not a litmus test for academic success in high school. There are a lot of students whose families can neither qualify for need-based aid, nor pay full price at top 20 schools (none of which award merit aid). Because of this, many or maybe most such students do not even apply to top schools, but instead choose a state school or a lower-ranked school that awards them merit aid.

In the DC metro area, this is a very common situation for families of high achievers.


This. My child just graduated from TJ and is attending an in-state school. We fall into the make too much for need-based aid, but can't afford $70K a year for a private school situation. As a result, my kid only applied to public universities (both in and out of state) that had generous merit aid and strong undergraduate engineering programs.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Admissions to prestigious schools is not a litmus test for academic success in high school. There are a lot of students whose families can neither qualify for need-based aid, nor pay full price at top 20 schools (none of which award merit aid). Because of this, many or maybe most such students do not even apply to top schools, but instead choose a state school or a lower-ranked school that awards them merit aid.

In the DC metro area, this is a very common situation for families of high achievers.


This. My child just graduated from TJ and is attending an in-state school. We fall into the make too much for need-based aid, but can't afford $70K a year for a private school situation. As a result, my kid only applied to public universities (both in and out of state) that had generous merit aid and strong undergraduate engineering programs.


Unless your kid is at the absolute top of the applicants (very few, extremely competitive), I don't know of any va publics that offer any merit aid.
Anonymous
The UVA dean read the admissions numbers to the students the last time she was there (how many applied, how many accepted, how many went). The counselors didn't even have the numbers. I look forward to someone reporting the numbers if she shares them this year.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Admissions to prestigious schools is not a litmus test for academic success in high school. There are a lot of students whose families can neither qualify for need-based aid, nor pay full price at top 20 schools (none of which award merit aid). Because of this, many or maybe most such students do not even apply to top schools, but instead choose a state school or a lower-ranked school that awards them merit aid.

In the DC metro area, this is a very common situation for families of high achievers.


This. My child just graduated from TJ and is attending an in-state school. We fall into the make too much for need-based aid, but can't afford $70K a year for a private school situation. As a result, my kid only applied to public universities (both in and out of state) that had generous merit aid and strong undergraduate engineering programs.


Unless your kid is at the absolute top of the applicants (very few, extremely competitive), I don't know of any va publics that offer any merit aid.


Sigh. They were out of state schools with merit aid to bring costs down to the in-state range. Wasn't concerned with merit at in-state schools.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Admissions to prestigious schools is not a litmus test for academic success in high school. There are a lot of students whose families can neither qualify for need-based aid, nor pay full price at top 20 schools (none of which award merit aid). Because of this, many or maybe most such students do not even apply to top schools, but instead choose a state school or a lower-ranked school that awards them merit aid.

In the DC metro area, this is a very common situation for families of high achievers.


This. My child just graduated from TJ and is attending an in-state school. We fall into the make too much for need-based aid, but can't afford $70K a year for a private school situation. As a result, my kid only applied to public universities (both in and out of state) that had generous merit aid and strong undergraduate engineering programs.


The bubble of those who make too much for need-based aid and not enough to save enough keeps growing. I wish you and your kid the best.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Maybe it's the fact that admission to these colleges is becoming more and more like a lottery and more kids are applying to more colleges hoping that more tickets will increase their chances of winning. Instead of applying to 5-6 colleges, kids are now applying to 10 or more. It becomes a feedback loop...


Yes but...Demographics don't indicate a spike in US college age population. It's actually steady to declining currently. If a child applies to 12 colleges and gets in to all 12, he/she can only attend 1 of them and the other 11 will have to fill his/her slot with someone else. IMHO the top universities have been successful in increasing their outreach to kids who wouldn't have applied in previous years (foreign students, URMs, 1st gen college students and families in the bottom 25%). My alma mater is one of those schools and its student population is now almost 50% students of color or first gen college. I wonder if less competitive private and state colleges (not the flagships UVA, UMichigan, UTexas, Berkeleys of the world) are seeing a DECLINE in applications.

Interesting question. Also, are the quality of students at the so-called second tiers (not my phrase or belief) rising? Professor friends at Midwest flag ships see the quality of student rising. And state schools (let's VaTech over UVA) I viewed as safeties for my own kids are possibly no longer safeties. The cal state schools (vs the traditionally more difficult to get into U Cal schools) are also becoming much harder to get into. I'm guessing more high priced lacs with small endowments will be taking a hit.


Even with a steady population of HS age Americans, could it be a higher % are actually graduating from HS and a higher % of those are going on to college resulting in a bump in college matriculations combined with the increasing # of foreign students also attending US colleges and universities. And thus former safety schools (like UVA for TJ grads or VaTech for other good VA HS students) are no longer safeties. In the process, the quality of students to many colleges espe 2nd tier schools is increasing as kids who used to be able to get into HYPS get pushed down the chain and so on.


UVA is not a safety school for TJ. A school that rejected 124 TJ students this year is not a safety school.


And accepted what, 240 ish? 75% of TJ kids apply. And some kids, believe it or not, don't apply at all, because they don't want to go. TJ had about a 2/3 acceptance rate last year. If you look at Naviance, UVA is a safety school for the top 1/2 of TJ. WGPA 4.3 with TJ average SATs will safely get you in from TJ unless something very strange is going on with the applicant. Like something that would trigger a negative counselor recommendation. UVA is runs at level to reach, but not out of the question, for the 3rd quartile. The upper end in terms of GPA and SATS will probably get in, and a reach for the lower end. It's a reach for the bottom quartile. A sprinkling get in, but something else probably comes into play to get them there. For UVA, VT Engineering and WM, much more so than other colleges, Naviance shows very consistent results. Most kids from TJ, except maybe those right at the changeover in the third quartile, know with a pretty high degree of certainty how they will fair.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Interesting, I graduated from TJ almost two decades ago and I think more than 100 people in my class went to U.Va. I wonder if it's harder to get in now or if more TJ students are turning U.Va down.


UVA and W&M would prefer not to admit applicants from NoVa.



+1

TJ or not.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Bye, PP., my DC is white. And thankful to be at TJ.


"Bye Bye"? Where did you go? Or are you trying to be flip? You don't sound very grateful. I am wondering why - as I explained my perspective. You know, as adults do.
Anonymous
Ha ha it wa a typo - I phone automatically corrected BTW to Bye. Probably because I accidentally typed BYW. T is right next to Y.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Looks similar to the data from my public HS in the Midwest. I'm not that impressed.


Curious, what Midwest public school sends 55 kids to the Ivys and more than 1/3 of the class to top 25 colleges?


New Trier in the very wealthy north shore burbs of Chicago, I'm guessing. PP has bragged about her high school before. It's like 3,500+ students, no diversity. Avg ACT is 28 -- I'd est. TJ's avg ACT is 30.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Maybe it's the fact that admission to these colleges is becoming more and more like a lottery and more kids are applying to more colleges hoping that more tickets will increase their chances of winning. Instead of applying to 5-6 colleges, kids are now applying to 10 or more. It becomes a feedback loop...


Yes but...Demographics don't indicate a spike in US college age population. It's actually steady to declining currently. If a child applies to 12 colleges and gets in to all 12, he/she can only attend 1 of them and the other 11 will have to fill his/her slot with someone else. IMHO the top universities have been successful in increasing their outreach to kids who wouldn't have applied in previous years (foreign students, URMs, 1st gen college students and families in the bottom 25%). My alma mater is one of those schools and its student population is now almost 50% students of color or first gen college. I wonder if less competitive private and state colleges (not the flagships UVA, UMichigan, UTexas, Berkeleys of the world) are seeing a DECLINE in applications.

Interesting question. Also, are the quality of students at the so-called second tiers (not my phrase or belief) rising? Professor friends at Midwest flag ships see the quality of student rising. And state schools (let's VaTech over UVA) I viewed as safeties for my own kids are possibly no longer safeties. The cal state schools (vs the traditionally more difficult to get into U Cal schools) are also becoming much harder to get into. I'm guessing more high priced lacs with small endowments will be taking a hit.


Even with a steady population of HS age Americans, could it be a higher % are actually graduating from HS and a higher % of those are going on to college resulting in a bump in college matriculations combined with the increasing # of foreign students also attending US colleges and universities. And thus former safety schools (like UVA for TJ grads or VaTech for other good VA HS students) are no longer safeties. In the process, the quality of students to many colleges espe 2nd tier schools is increasing as kids who used to be able to get into HYPS get pushed down the chain and so on.


UVA is not a safety school for TJ. A school that rejected 124 TJ students this year is not a safety school.


And accepted what, 240 ish? 75% of TJ kids apply. And some kids, believe it or not, don't apply at all, because they don't want to go. TJ had about a 2/3 acceptance rate last year. If you look at Naviance, UVA is a safety school for the top 1/2 of TJ. WGPA 4.3 with TJ average SATs will safely get you in from TJ unless something very strange is going on with the applicant. Like something that would trigger a negative counselor recommendation. UVA is runs at level to reach, but not out of the question, for the 3rd quartile. The upper end in terms of GPA and SATS will probably get in, and a reach for the lower end. It's a reach for the bottom quartile. A sprinkling get in, but something else probably comes into play to get them there. For UVA, VT Engineering and WM, much more so than other colleges, Naviance shows very consistent results. Most kids from TJ, except maybe those right at the changeover in the third quartile, know with a pretty high degree of certainty how they will fair.


Parent of current TJ student here and this post is spot on. Naviance stats for the last several years at TJ do show that if a student has above a certain GPA and SAT/ACT test scores, said student is almost assured of admission to UVA. And that proved true this year. Though TJ does not formally rank its students, the kids know based on their weighted GPA where they generally stand. And for many of these students UVA is a safety school.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Looks similar to the data from my public HS in the Midwest. I'm not that impressed.


Curious, what Midwest public school sends 55 kids to the Ivys and more than 1/3 of the class to top 25 colleges?


New Trier in the very wealthy north shore burbs of Chicago, I'm guessing. PP has bragged about her high school before. It's like 3,500+ students, no diversity. Avg ACT is 28 -- I'd est. TJ's avg ACT is 30.


According to Niche.com, TJ's average ACT score is 34 (though not sure that is accurate): https://www.niche.com/k12/thomas-jefferson-high-school-for-science--and--technology-alexandria-va/
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
New Trier in the very wealthy north shore burbs of Chicago, I'm guessing. PP has bragged about her high school before. It's like 3,500+ students, no diversity. Avg ACT is 28 -- I'd est. TJ's avg ACT is 30.


Closer to 4,500 students nowadays. Oh, and this:
http://newtrier.k12.il.us/audiences/seniors/graduation/graduation_attire/
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
New Trier in the very wealthy north shore burbs of Chicago, I'm guessing. PP has bragged about her high school before. It's like 3,500+ students, no diversity. Avg ACT is 28 -- I'd est. TJ's avg ACT is 30.


Closer to 4,500 students nowadays. Oh, and this:
http://newtrier.k12.il.us/audiences/seniors/graduation/graduation_attire/


Lolz. Seems like your run of the mill public high school.

More than twice the graduating class of TJ, and yet only 38 NMSFs vs 119 for TJ. Average SATs of 2009 (2400) vs 2198. 4.1 average AP score with 47% getting a 5. Vs 4.5 apverage AP, with 63% getting a 5.

Stacked up against TJ, I'm not impressed. I can't imagine this is the school, because it lags way behind. The college list is going to be less impressive. Even though it is wealthy white and will benefit from legacy and development.
Anonymous
This list is retarded.

You can pretty much do any job you want without attending a top 10-15 school. Sure, exceptions are Big Law, Investment Banking and a couple others. These kids gave up a good chunk of their childhood, but at least the parents are happy!!
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