How many kids are in the grade? It might be like 25% of their seniors. |
I just checked the 2022 list. TJ had 144 NMS semifinalists. 44% reduction in 3 years. |
Not by enough to cover the drop from last year or 2022 though. It strongly implies the educational quality at TJ really made a difference in how many kids made NMSF. Principals complained back in the 1990s that they would have so many more NMSF and other award winners if only TJ didn't exist, but it doesn't look like that's true. |
No, that’s not what this poster means. I’m comparing the entire student population, public vs. private. Every NMSF at MoCo publics aren’t in magnets, so why should I only consider that tiny subset of students, for the sake of comparison. |
Most likely, those students turn down the private school because they can’t afford the tuition. Let’s not pretend that money isn’t a factor. |
A considerable percentage of Sidwell’s graduating classes are lifers (or students who enrolled before 4th grade). That means that Sidwell had very little quantitative data to rely on besides an IQ score, which is not very stable at such a young age. Many of those early admits end up being average or below average performers (both grades and test scores). So, I think the fair denominator is the size of the entire public school grade. That’s the only denominator I will use or accept. |
No, a Potomac parent wanted to brag about Potomac high number by falsely stating that Potomac is small. People are just stating that Potomac is one of the biggest schools among the privates. |
Well, it seems true. TJ's numbers went down, many schools numbers went up. |
A countywide total would be nice but I can’t find it. But just comparing McLean plus Langley; in 2022 those schools had 21 combined and yesterday they had 35. |
It is 4 of 30 seniors at BASIS. |
LOL they only have 24 in the class. Four of 24 is 17%, which is a higher percentage of NMSF than any public or private school in the DMV including TJ. |
A lot of posters here are putting down the students on these lists. Why? |
The argument is that your comparison is not fair. If you're comparing the top private schools which admit students selectively you should compare them to the top magnet schools which also admit students selectively. You're acting like Sidwell and Landon are open to everyone. There are some kids at MCPS that are not going to college. They don't even take the test. |
I think most families that couldn't afford it wouldn't bother applying in the first place. Money was not a factor for our child who got in. The other child did not get in so they went to a private school. |
Ok but what is the purpose of your comparison? Is it to say Sidwell provides a better academic environment than specific public schools? How do you reconcile the fact that RMIB students spend the majority of their time in classes with other RMIB students so it's really a school within a school and there are 20-30 NMSF in that cohort that is very similar in size to the grade they would have been in had they gone to Sidwell. |