Next thing you know, you'll say TJ graduates "back in the day" paid for college with summer jobs! Look, things have changed since then. College admission is a different ballgame now. Making yourself an attractive candidate is a different ballgame now. It's different for everyone! At every high school across the nation. Not just TJ. |
This is not unique for TJ. Nowadays, high school students and their families are concerned with college admissions as the overall environment has changed. Just look at the Varsity-Blue scandal. |
Over 100 students in the class of 2000 applied to Princeton (over 1/4 of the class!). The major local summer internship programs (SEAP, NIH, etc) were overwhelmingly TJ students. I think you have some rose-colored glasses on. |
So it won't be number one or even top ten. Congrats I guess. |
PP. They definitely did not pay for college with summer jobs, at least not in large numbers. A few did work during college as needed, but for the most part TJ was every bit as affluent then as it is now. And the point is, in those days the primary motivation was not college. It was enjoying the rigorous high school environment, working hard and playing hard, FOR ITS OWN SAKE, not as a springboard or a stepping stone to something else. |
Guarantee you that number is a LOT higher now. I wouldn't be surprised if it were as high as 250. |
DP - Certainly there were some kids with an unhealthy obsession over college admission and resume building back then, but many weren't. I think that's flipped with today's TJ. |
100% |
129 in the class of 2019 (and this is with a graduating class of 450, rather than 400). So no. See: https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/771777.page |
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It is to get more Whites in TJ.
URM numbers won't go up. |
Excellent post, thank you. |
Oops, class of 2018. |
regarding Prince William county, if the bar is the same (3.5 GPA/algebra1) there will be zillions of kids that would qualify. I know for my kids school there are about 50 eighth graders taking geometry with a 4.0, so probably many more with only ALgebra1. My younger DD (8th grade) was not planning on applying because she doesn't want the rigor of TJ (from seeing her brother going to TJ), but we are seriously considering it now since a lottery will probably bring in more students of her "level"(bright but not genius). And for the record, she's asian, and I know a lot more asian families are considering TJ now with the lottery. I really don't think a lottery will solve the URM issues. There might be an increase in Black/Hispanic interest but it will be overshadowed by an even sharper increase in Asian interest. Just my 2 cents. And if PW has 68 spots by lottery, trust me they will be taken because when my older son took the TJ entrance test, there were hundreds of kids there. |
Increasing the number of previously uninterested but qualified Asians is good too. As I posted elsewhere, this change will benefit all students including Asians. |
The rigor of TJ is not supposed to change with the new admissions procedure. |