
1) False 2) There are a lot more ways to impact the real world than just through "companies". |
1) Putting aside your personal involvement in the advocacy to change the TJ admissions process, any rational reader keeping up with this thread would perceive that you are generally supportive of the 2020 admissions changes and broadly dismissive of those who oppose those changes. Whether you might make further, incremental changes if you were king is really besides the point, which was to respond to your effort to deny the reality that TJ policies and practices have been a constant source of criticism and distraction from FCPS's other business for many years. 2) I don't see Asra Nomani, Harry Jackson, Glenn Miller, etc. as any more destructive than Sujatha Hampton, Vanessa Winter Hall, Jorge Torrico, etc - they all seek to make TJ the center of a disproportionate amount of FCPS attention and resources in order to further their own personal visions of what TJ should be and who it should and should not serve. This type of bitter divide did not exist when TJHSST opened in the mid-80s, but it has now existed for many years. The players change, but the controversy persists, to the detriment of the vast majority of other schools and students whose needs either go unaddressed entirely or receive only a fraction of the attention constantly lavished on TJ. 3) It simply is not "common knowledge" that TJ resources would be wasted if the school were converted to a full-time Academy. That would all depend on the nature of the Academy courses and the times at which they were offered. As for the amount of money spent to upgrade TJ to its current use as a full-time STEM school, $100M sounds like and is a lot of money, but the amount of money required to build a new school likely would be many multiples of $100M. Even if one were to assume there are sunk costs in TJHSST that would essentially never realize their originally intended benefits, it may be more practical and less expensive to incur that cost than to continue to fantasize over a new school, as FCPS has now done for almost too many years to count. And there are very real "equity" issues associated with the disparities between a 2200-student magnet school at TJ and the 3000-student factories that could be avoided or reduced if FCPS returned TJ to use as a community school. 4) As you almost surely know, it is not an option for FCPS or the School Board to simply "spend no more time on the TJ matter." That would delight, not silence, those whom you call "trolls" because another word for "spending no more time on the TJ matter" is "default." That would give the Coalition for TJ, etc., what they want and is not remotely within the realm of what is politically feasible in FCPS. Rather, what we've seen is that the fight will go on because it must go on to establish who is morally superior, and it has just led to more fighting over TJ and more neglect of everyone else. Your tolerance level for the ongoing degradation of the vast majority of FCPS, so long as TJHSST survives, is, one suspects, far greater than that of many others who are by now just fed up with the non-stop carping. |
Can you provide even a single example of anything that came out of TJ that had a material impact on a local STEM company? |
As I expected, no arguments. Simply one completely delusional assertion equating the impacts of the folks that you mentioned with Nomani and Jackson and Dutta and Miller. They're not even in the same universe. If they were, you would have heard a similar volume of nonsense (and a great deal of what those folks you mentioned spew is nonsense) during the years prior to the admissions changes. Even in the aftermath of George Floyd, you didn't have news media outlets talking about TJ and stirring up all sorts of false assertions like what you see happening now. Those folks on the left have not caused nearly as much destruction to the school community or sucked up nearly as many of FCPS's resources on their side of the fight, and to assert that they have is, as I mentioned, completely delusional. |
To the contrary, I think you’re frustrated that I rebutted some of your assertions politely and with details. However, since you’d like to have the last word and be viewed as authoritative on all things TJ, you’re now resorting to personal attacks on me to go along with your prior personal attacks on Nomani, etc. I’m not surprised, but neither am I impressed. Of course it sucked up resources when the Fairfax NAACP was filing complaints about TJ with the federal Department of Education and the MSOC was complaining about TJ’s demographics in a series of annual reports. None of this kvetching went ignored, and all of it required attention and resources that could have been devoted to other FCPS matters. You think it’s more egregious because the shoe is now on the other foot, but the salient point, which you conveniently choose to ignore, is that the fighting over TJ never stops now. At some point rational people charged with the oversight of all 200 schools in FCPS, and not just one, can fairly ask if a selective, stand-alone magnet school still makes sense for Fairfax. |
I guess any group that makes up just 15% or so of the county but gets maybe 5% of the seats have reason to complain. However, a group of 15% that gets over 60% of the seats does not. It's not all that complicated. |
Are we supposed to complain because one group has a lot of really smart students? |
bull |
Don't know about that but pretty sure one spends a lot on outside prep. |
True, but if you tilt your head to the right and squint you might also be able to confuse merit with opportunity and come to a different conclusion. |
There are also kids that you could prep for a year, and they wouldn't do well. As a group, Asians are very intelligent. |
It may not be complicated, but it's certainly reductive to treat all students whose families have origins in a very large continent as "Asians" and not consider how they are treated as individuals based on merit but rather only as members of a group. |
No it doesn't identify the top students. For example, MathCounts students who advanced to state(and not just the top 50% in the unique 2021 year, but legit winners at regionals), or USAJMO qualifiers, which is about the top 100 in the whole country for 10th grade and below. |
This was my calculation, and I think I was wrong about the reform. It wasn't TJ, which maybe has chances dropping by half at some schools, but for AOS which set a maximum quota per school. This parent's child went to a school that was way above its quota in prior years. |
I was surprised to see they give schools in Loudoun and Prince William the same 1.5% allocations. Is this required by some state law? I would expect they would only give seats to Fairfax and make the other counties pay and have their students in the general pool. |