Did Walls interview invites go out?

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:It all comes down to whether or not you have a teacher who maxes out the recommendation form. When my kid went through this a few years ago at Deal there was one English teacher who didn't max it out for any students on that team and zero kids from that team got in despite many of them having a 4.0 and being school leaders.

It's a deeply flawed process but it's DCPS and that's what they do.


My kid suspected this. He was shocked his friends with 4.0’s in geometry, physics, and who are in national junior honors society, student council, etc, did not get interviews. He suspected it was partially because one of the teachers they all had write their recs is pretty tough on them.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It all comes down to whether or not you have a teacher who maxes out the recommendation form. When my kid went through this a few years ago at Deal there was one English teacher who didn't max it out for any students on that team and zero kids from that team got in despite many of them having a 4.0 and being school leaders.

It's a deeply flawed process but it's DCPS and that's what they do.


My kid suspected this. He was shocked his friends with 4.0’s in geometry, physics, and who are in national junior honors society, student council, etc, did not get interviews. He suspected it was partially because one of the teachers they all had write their recs is pretty tough on them.


Yes, but don't blame the teachers. People write recs in different ways and I don't think DCPS communicates to teachers that anyone with less than a perfect rating won't move on. Teachers who know this will pass through everyone who is decent. Teachers who don't have in the past dinged even the top kids because this is a very reasonable way to complete a rec (i.e no one is perfect, there is room for improvement, etc).
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It all comes down to whether or not you have a teacher who maxes out the recommendation form. When my kid went through this a few years ago at Deal there was one English teacher who didn't max it out for any students on that team and zero kids from that team got in despite many of them having a 4.0 and being school leaders.

It's a deeply flawed process but it's DCPS and that's what they do.


My kid suspected this. He was shocked his friends with 4.0’s in geometry, physics, and who are in national junior honors society, student council, etc, did not get interviews. He suspected it was partially because one of the teachers they all had write their recs is pretty tough on them.


What DCPS school offers physics?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It all comes down to whether or not you have a teacher who maxes out the recommendation form. When my kid went through this a few years ago at Deal there was one English teacher who didn't max it out for any students on that team and zero kids from that team got in despite many of them having a 4.0 and being school leaders.

It's a deeply flawed process but it's DCPS and that's what they do.


My kid suspected this. He was shocked his friends with 4.0’s in geometry, physics, and who are in national junior honors society, student council, etc, did not get interviews. He suspected it was partially because one of the teachers they all had write their recs is pretty tough on them.


Yes, but don't blame the teachers. People write recs in different ways and I don't think DCPS communicates to teachers that anyone with less than a perfect rating won't move on. Teachers who know this will pass through everyone who is decent. Teachers who don't have in the past dinged even the top kids because this is a very reasonable way to complete a rec (i.e no one is perfect, there is room for improvement, etc).


Honestly if there is one takeaway for me of this process it is that teacher recommendations should not be required. They are a massive burden on teachers and can be arbitrarily unfair if the teacher has a different standard than others or doesn’t understand the game. Grades and essays should be enough - schools that want to assess writing or other skills could do a test, workshop, portfolio or interview.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It all comes down to whether or not you have a teacher who maxes out the recommendation form. When my kid went through this a few years ago at Deal there was one English teacher who didn't max it out for any students on that team and zero kids from that team got in despite many of them having a 4.0 and being school leaders.

It's a deeply flawed process but it's DCPS and that's what they do.


My kid suspected this. He was shocked his friends with 4.0’s in geometry, physics, and who are in national junior honors society, student council, etc, did not get interviews. He suspected it was partially because one of the teachers they all had write their recs is pretty tough on them.


What DCPS school offers physics?


Hardy. It’s an elective
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It all comes down to whether or not you have a teacher who maxes out the recommendation form. When my kid went through this a few years ago at Deal there was one English teacher who didn't max it out for any students on that team and zero kids from that team got in despite many of them having a 4.0 and being school leaders.

It's a deeply flawed process but it's DCPS and that's what they do.


My kid suspected this. He was shocked his friends with 4.0’s in geometry, physics, and who are in national junior honors society, student council, etc, did not get interviews. He suspected it was partially because one of the teachers they all had write their recs is pretty tough on them.


Yes, but don't blame the teachers. People write recs in different ways and I don't think DCPS communicates to teachers that anyone with less than a perfect rating won't move on. Teachers who know this will pass through everyone who is decent. Teachers who don't have in the past dinged even the top kids because this is a very reasonable way to complete a rec (i.e no one is perfect, there is room for improvement, etc).


Honestly if there is one takeaway for me of this process it is that teacher recommendations should not be required. They are a massive burden on teachers and can be arbitrarily unfair if the teacher has a different standard than others or doesn’t understand the game. Grades and essays should be enough - schools that want to assess writing or other skills could do a test, workshop, portfolio or interview.


And their effect is magnified when recs play such a big role in deciding who gets an interview. I think it is absolutely true that many teachers (and parents) don’t understand the impact of these recommendations on students’ chances. Middle school leadership or counselors may have some ability to communicate this to teachers, but there is inherently going to be variation from teacher to teacher, especially without some system for norming these recommendations.

The problem remains that the pool of highly qualified kids is larger than the number of spots available. It’s not simple to come up with a fair admissions process and I can appreciate the value of rec letters as part of an overall application package, but the way the current application process uses them seems flawed.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It all comes down to whether or not you have a teacher who maxes out the recommendation form. When my kid went through this a few years ago at Deal there was one English teacher who didn't max it out for any students on that team and zero kids from that team got in despite many of them having a 4.0 and being school leaders.

It's a deeply flawed process but it's DCPS and that's what they do.


My kid suspected this. He was shocked his friends with 4.0’s in geometry, physics, and who are in national junior honors society, student council, etc, did not get interviews. He suspected it was partially because one of the teachers they all had write their recs is pretty tough on them.


Yes, but don't blame the teachers. People write recs in different ways and I don't think DCPS communicates to teachers that anyone with less than a perfect rating won't move on. Teachers who know this will pass through everyone who is decent. Teachers who don't have in the past dinged even the top kids because this is a very reasonable way to complete a rec (i.e no one is perfect, there is room for improvement, etc).


I'm definitely not blaming the teachers.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It all comes down to whether or not you have a teacher who maxes out the recommendation form. When my kid went through this a few years ago at Deal there was one English teacher who didn't max it out for any students on that team and zero kids from that team got in despite many of them having a 4.0 and being school leaders.

It's a deeply flawed process but it's DCPS and that's what they do.


My kid suspected this. He was shocked his friends with 4.0’s in geometry, physics, and who are in national junior honors society, student council, etc, did not get interviews. He suspected it was partially because one of the teachers they all had write their recs is pretty tough on them.


Yes, but don't blame the teachers. People write recs in different ways and I don't think DCPS communicates to teachers that anyone with less than a perfect rating won't move on. Teachers who know this will pass through everyone who is decent. Teachers who don't have in the past dinged even the top kids because this is a very reasonable way to complete a rec (i.e no one is perfect, there is room for improvement, etc).


Honestly if there is one takeaway for me of this process it is that teacher recommendations should not be required. They are a massive burden on teachers and can be arbitrarily unfair if the teacher has a different standard than others or doesn’t understand the game. Grades and essays should be enough - schools that want to assess writing or other skills could do a test, workshop, portfolio or interview.


And their effect is magnified when recs play such a big role in deciding who gets an interview. I think it is absolutely true that many teachers (and parents) don’t understand the impact of these recommendations on students’ chances. Middle school leadership or counselors may have some ability to communicate this to teachers, but there is inherently going to be variation from teacher to teacher, especially without some system for norming these recommendations.

The problem remains that the pool of highly qualified kids is larger than the number of spots available. It’s not simple to come up with a fair admissions process and I can appreciate the value of rec letters as part of an overall application package, but the way the current application process uses them seems flawed.


A big flaw is that recs count for so much. Much more than GPA and it is way overweighted.

I think this is because it gives the school much more leeway in who they want to admit and goal is not the top of the top kids as it should be.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It all comes down to whether or not you have a teacher who maxes out the recommendation form. When my kid went through this a few years ago at Deal there was one English teacher who didn't max it out for any students on that team and zero kids from that team got in despite many of them having a 4.0 and being school leaders.

It's a deeply flawed process but it's DCPS and that's what they do.


My kid suspected this. He was shocked his friends with 4.0’s in geometry, physics, and who are in national junior honors society, student council, etc, did not get interviews. He suspected it was partially because one of the teachers they all had write their recs is pretty tough on them.


Yes, but don't blame the teachers. People write recs in different ways and I don't think DCPS communicates to teachers that anyone with less than a perfect rating won't move on. Teachers who know this will pass through everyone who is decent. Teachers who don't have in the past dinged even the top kids because this is a very reasonable way to complete a rec (i.e no one is perfect, there is room for improvement, etc).


Honestly if there is one takeaway for me of this process it is that teacher recommendations should not be required. They are a massive burden on teachers and can be arbitrarily unfair if the teacher has a different standard than others or doesn’t understand the game. Grades and essays should be enough - schools that want to assess writing or other skills could do a test, workshop, portfolio or interview.


Lots of grade inflation in DCPS.

It should be testing weather that is standardized testing or school administering test, then courses, grades, and essays.

You can have a great grade by taking easier courses. If the testing was still a part of it, you would be an able to weed that out and wouldn’t have so many kids below grade level in math.
Anonymous
I agree that the process is not transparent, and there probably should be a test component (or use CAPE scores). What they shouldn’t do is consider the difficultly of the kids” course load. That would be completely unfair and take certain schools out of the running. This isn’t a college application.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I agree that the process is not transparent, and there probably should be a test component (or use CAPE scores). What they shouldn’t do is consider the difficultly of the kids” course load. That would be completely unfair and take certain schools out of the running. This isn’t a college application.


I do think you could weight grades in courses as long as 4.0 was the max. So like a B+ in Geometry would at least be worth the same 4.0 as the A in remedial math.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:It all comes down to whether or not you have a teacher who maxes out the recommendation form. When my kid went through this a few years ago at Deal there was one English teacher who didn't max it out for any students on that team and zero kids from that team got in despite many of them having a 4.0 and being school leaders.

It's a deeply flawed process but it's DCPS and that's what they do.


Yes. This. Because recs are worth so much more than GPA, if you have a teacher who doesn’t give top marks to your kid (or to all kids they teach) then your kid won’t get an interview. It isn’t fair, but it is really that simple.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It all comes down to whether or not you have a teacher who maxes out the recommendation form. When my kid went through this a few years ago at Deal there was one English teacher who didn't max it out for any students on that team and zero kids from that team got in despite many of them having a 4.0 and being school leaders.

It's a deeply flawed process but it's DCPS and that's what they do.


My kid suspected this. He was shocked his friends with 4.0’s in geometry, physics, and who are in national junior honors society, student council, etc, did not get interviews. He suspected it was partially because one of the teachers they all had write their recs is pretty tough on them.



Walls is a humanities oriented HS. How did this friend do in ELA and writing! It is not enough to be top in STEM classes.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It all comes down to whether or not you have a teacher who maxes out the recommendation form. When my kid went through this a few years ago at Deal there was one English teacher who didn't max it out for any students on that team and zero kids from that team got in despite many of them having a 4.0 and being school leaders.

It's a deeply flawed process but it's DCPS and that's what they do.


My kid suspected this. He was shocked his friends with 4.0’s in geometry, physics, and who are in national junior honors society, student council, etc, did not get interviews. He suspected it was partially because one of the teachers they all had write their recs is pretty tough on them.


Yes, but don't blame the teachers. People write recs in different ways and I don't think DCPS communicates to teachers that anyone with less than a perfect rating won't move on. Teachers who know this will pass through everyone who is decent. Teachers who don't have in the past dinged even the top kids because this is a very reasonable way to complete a rec (i.e no one is perfect, there is room for improvement, etc).


Honestly if there is one takeaway for me of this process it is that teacher recommendations should not be required. They are a massive burden on teachers and can be arbitrarily unfair if the teacher has a different standard than others or doesn’t understand the game. Grades and essays should be enough - schools that want to assess writing or other skills could do a test, workshop, portfolio or interview.


And their effect is magnified when recs play such a big role in deciding who gets an interview. I think it is absolutely true that many teachers (and parents) don’t understand the impact of these recommendations on students’ chances. Middle school leadership or counselors may have some ability to communicate this to teachers, but there is inherently going to be variation from teacher to teacher, especially without some system for norming these recommendations.

The problem remains that the pool of highly qualified kids is larger than the number of spots available. It’s not simple to come up with a fair admissions process and I can appreciate the value of rec letters as part of an overall application package, but the way the current application process uses them seems flawed.


Exactly. “The pool of highly qualified kids is larger than the number of spots available.”

That means Walls can conduct a pretty slipshod process and still wind up with a strong class.

And the teachers get paid the same, whether they put in 10 hours for admissions or 100. So they have every incentive to stick with this imperfect process. Just make sure you have a backup plan, and don’t let your kid take the results too seriously.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It all comes down to whether or not you have a teacher who maxes out the recommendation form. When my kid went through this a few years ago at Deal there was one English teacher who didn't max it out for any students on that team and zero kids from that team got in despite many of them having a 4.0 and being school leaders.

It's a deeply flawed process but it's DCPS and that's what they do.


My kid suspected this. He was shocked his friends with 4.0’s in geometry, physics, and who are in national junior honors society, student council, etc, did not get interviews. He suspected it was partially because one of the teachers they all had write their recs is pretty tough on them.


Yes, but don't blame the teachers. People write recs in different ways and I don't think DCPS communicates to teachers that anyone with less than a perfect rating won't move on. Teachers who know this will pass through everyone who is decent. Teachers who don't have in the past dinged even the top kids because this is a very reasonable way to complete a rec (i.e no one is perfect, there is room for improvement, etc).


Honestly if there is one takeaway for me of this process it is that teacher recommendations should not be required. They are a massive burden on teachers and can be arbitrarily unfair if the teacher has a different standard than others or doesn’t understand the game. Grades and essays should be enough - schools that want to assess writing or other skills could do a test, workshop, portfolio or interview.


And their effect is magnified when recs play such a big role in deciding who gets an interview. I think it is absolutely true that many teachers (and parents) don’t understand the impact of these recommendations on students’ chances. Middle school leadership or counselors may have some ability to communicate this to teachers, but there is inherently going to be variation from teacher to teacher, especially without some system for norming these recommendations.

The problem remains that the pool of highly qualified kids is larger than the number of spots available. It’s not simple to come up with a fair admissions process and I can appreciate the value of rec letters as part of an overall application package, but the way the current application process uses them seems flawed.


Exactly. “The pool of highly qualified kids is larger than the number of spots available.”

That means Walls can conduct a pretty slipshod process and still wind up with a strong class.

And the teachers get paid the same, whether they put in 10 hours for admissions or 100. So they have every incentive to stick with this imperfect process. Just make sure you have a backup plan, and don’t let your kid take the results too seriously.


Yea, I wouldn’t take it seriously at all.

Obviously, they are not taking the most highly qualified applicants and there is massive grade inflation at the school which doesn’t help either.
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