College admissions from low SES

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Kids are compared against their peers in their high school first. So yes standing out gives one an advantage in college admissions.

Many FCPS high schools are schools within schools. A group going on to college, a group taking advantage of vocational training opportunities and a group where high school is the terminal education point.

Having a 1580 SAT and a 4.5 GPA at West Potomac is going to stand out more than those same figures at TJ or McLean or Langley.


It’s less likely you’ll end up with that 1580 SAT if you’ve come up through the West Potomac pyramid. And only a few schools are going to care about making sure they offer seats to kids from every FCPS high school.


Bullshit. Pyramids don’t produce 1580’s. Paying for tutoring does.


We’d see better NMSF/CS results at the lower ranked schools if all the UMC families needed to do was buy into those schools and then pay for tutoring.

Nope, if you want to prepare your kids well, you make sure they attend schools with high performing peers, not schools that focus on the bare minimum needed to get kids to graduate.



Yeah you still don’t get it. When you have an entire school trying to buy prestige, you have some success stats to cherry pick. When most of the school can’t do that, you can’t cherry pick the few that have resources. Not EVERY rich kid can buy success. But out of an entire school is rich kids you can purchase some 1580’s.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Kids are compared against their peers in their high school first. So yes standing out gives one an advantage in college admissions.

Many FCPS high schools are schools within schools. A group going on to college, a group taking advantage of vocational training opportunities and a group where high school is the terminal education point.

Having a 1580 SAT and a 4.5 GPA at West Potomac is going to stand out more than those same figures at TJ or McLean or Langley.


It’s less likely you’ll end up with that 1580 SAT if you’ve come up through the West Potomac pyramid. And only a few schools are going to care about making sure they offer seats to kids from every FCPS high school.


Bullshit. Pyramids don’t produce 1580’s. Paying for tutoring does.


We’d see better NMSF/CS results at the lower ranked schools if all the UMC families needed to do was buy into those schools and then pay for tutoring.

Nope, if you want to prepare your kids well, you make sure they attend schools with high performing peers, not schools that focus on the bare minimum needed to get kids to graduate.



Yeah you still don’t get it. When you have an entire school trying to buy prestige, you have some success stats to cherry pick. When most of the school can’t do that, you can’t cherry pick the few that have resources. Not EVERY rich kid can buy success. But out of an entire school is rich kids you can purchase some 1580’s.


What you don’t get is that the most educated parents in the county consistently prefer, given a choice, that their kids attend schools with a culture of academic excellence, rather than attend schools where the primary focus is on getting kids to pass SOLs and graduate and the more affluent parents look down on most of the kids as an undifferentiated group of low achievers who exist merely to make their own kids look better by comparison. They want strong schools, not “schools within a school” or whatever other cute phrase you can come up with.

I’m sorry that vexes you so much, but it’s the reality as long as the county isn’t dictating which schools kids can attend.
Anonymous
What's interesting to me is how hard certain people come down on lower SES schools.

You want your kid to go to a higher SES school? That's great! Good for you! You do you.

But those same folks continually disparage those who attend lower SES schools and are happy and successful there. I wonder why. Is it an insecurity thing? You want to believe that you made the right decision? You feel the best way you can do it is to put down anyone who takes a different track in life? You continue to play the same recording of negativity, over and over, and you don't want to listen to anyone who says it's not like that.

I went to a lower SES school, got scholarship that paid for most of my undergrad, then a full-ride scholarship for my master's degree. My family is definitely UMC, and I mean upper. My kids are at a school with low SES kids, and they're doing great. To be honest, I'm more comfortable with the lower SES community.

So let me encourage you to continue to do you. Live where you want. And I don't know your kid, but I hope they turn out just fine.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:What's interesting to me is how hard certain people come down on lower SES schools.

You want your kid to go to a higher SES school? That's great! Good for you! You do you.

But those same folks continually disparage those who attend lower SES schools and are happy and successful there. I wonder why. Is it an insecurity thing? You want to believe that you made the right decision? You feel the best way you can do it is to put down anyone who takes a different track in life? You continue to play the same recording of negativity, over and over, and you don't want to listen to anyone who says it's not like that.

I went to a lower SES school, got scholarship that paid for most of my undergrad, then a full-ride scholarship for my master's degree. My family is definitely UMC, and I mean upper. My kids are at a school with low SES kids, and they're doing great. To be honest, I'm more comfortable with the lower SES community.

So let me encourage you to continue to do you. Live where you want. And I don't know your kid, but I hope they turn out just fine.


By all means make the best of your personal situation. Just stop the BS that attending a lower SES school is a big advantage when it comes to college preparation and admissions. Those of us with direct personal experience with different pyramids in FCPS know that's the exception, not the rule.

And, of course, there's an irony is touting the "school within the school" at the lower SES schools and then claiming you've immersed yourself in a "lower SES community."

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Kids are compared against their peers in their high school first. So yes standing out gives one an advantage in college admissions.

Many FCPS high schools are schools within schools. A group going on to college, a group taking advantage of vocational training opportunities and a group where high school is the terminal education point.

Having a 1580 SAT and a 4.5 GPA at West Potomac is going to stand out more than those same figures at TJ or McLean or Langley.


It’s less likely you’ll end up with that 1580 SAT if you’ve come up through the West Potomac pyramid. And only a few schools are going to care about making sure they offer seats to kids from every FCPS high school.


Bullshit. Pyramids don’t produce 1580’s. Paying for tutoring does.


We’d see better NMSF/CS results at the lower ranked schools if all the UMC families needed to do was buy into those schools and then pay for tutoring.

Nope, if you want to prepare your kids well, you make sure they attend schools with high performing peers, not schools that focus on the bare minimum needed to get kids to graduate.



Yeah you still don’t get it. When you have an entire school trying to buy prestige, you have some success stats to cherry pick. When most of the school can’t do that, you can’t cherry pick the few that have resources. Not EVERY rich kid can buy success. But out of an entire school is rich kids you can purchase some 1580’s.


What you don’t get is that the most educated parents in the county consistently prefer, given a choice, that their kids attend schools with a culture of academic excellence, rather than attend schools where the primary focus is on getting kids to pass SOLs and graduate and the more affluent parents look down on most of the kids as an undifferentiated group of low achievers who exist merely to make their own kids look better by comparison. They want strong schools, not “schools within a school” or whatever other cute phrase you can come up with.

I’m sorry that vexes you so much, but it’s the reality as long as the county isn’t dictating which schools kids can attend.


You sound biased, not educated.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Kids are compared against their peers in their high school first. So yes standing out gives one an advantage in college admissions.

Many FCPS high schools are schools within schools. A group going on to college, a group taking advantage of vocational training opportunities and a group where high school is the terminal education point.

Having a 1580 SAT and a 4.5 GPA at West Potomac is going to stand out more than those same figures at TJ or McLean or Langley.


It’s less likely you’ll end up with that 1580 SAT if you’ve come up through the West Potomac pyramid. And only a few schools are going to care about making sure they offer seats to kids from every FCPS high school.


Bullshit. Pyramids don’t produce 1580’s. Paying for tutoring does.


We’d see better NMSF/CS results at the lower ranked schools if all the UMC families needed to do was buy into those schools and then pay for tutoring.

Nope, if you want to prepare your kids well, you make sure they attend schools with high performing peers, not schools that focus on the bare minimum needed to get kids to graduate.



Yeah you still don’t get it. When you have an entire school trying to buy prestige, you have some success stats to cherry pick. When most of the school can’t do that, you can’t cherry pick the few that have resources. Not EVERY rich kid can buy success. But out of an entire school is rich kids you can purchase some 1580’s.


What you don’t get is that the most educated parents in the county consistently prefer, given a choice, that their kids attend schools with a culture of academic excellence, rather than attend schools where the primary focus is on getting kids to pass SOLs and graduate and the more affluent parents look down on most of the kids as an undifferentiated group of low achievers who exist merely to make their own kids look better by comparison. They want strong schools, not “schools within a school” or whatever other cute phrase you can come up with.

I’m sorry that vexes you so much, but it’s the reality as long as the county isn’t dictating which schools kids can attend.


You sound biased, not educated.


Experienced and well educated, if you must know.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Kids are compared against their peers in their high school first. So yes standing out gives one an advantage in college admissions.

Many FCPS high schools are schools within schools. A group going on to college, a group taking advantage of vocational training opportunities and a group where high school is the terminal education point.

Having a 1580 SAT and a 4.5 GPA at West Potomac is going to stand out more than those same figures at TJ or McLean or Langley.


It’s less likely you’ll end up with that 1580 SAT if you’ve come up through the West Potomac pyramid. And only a few schools are going to care about making sure they offer seats to kids from every FCPS high school.


Bullshit. Pyramids don’t produce 1580’s. Paying for tutoring does.


We’d see better NMSF/CS results at the lower ranked schools if all the UMC families needed to do was buy into those schools and then pay for tutoring.

Nope, if you want to prepare your kids well, you make sure they attend schools with high performing peers, not schools that focus on the bare minimum needed to get kids to graduate.



Yeah you still don’t get it. When you have an entire school trying to buy prestige, you have some success stats to cherry pick. When most of the school can’t do that, you can’t cherry pick the few that have resources. Not EVERY rich kid can buy success. But out of an entire school is rich kids you can purchase some 1580’s.


What you don’t get is that the most educated parents in the county consistently prefer, given a choice, that their kids attend schools with a culture of academic excellence, rather than attend schools where the primary focus is on getting kids to pass SOLs and graduate and the more affluent parents look down on most of the kids as an undifferentiated group of low achievers who exist merely to make their own kids look better by comparison. They want strong schools, not “schools within a school” or whatever other cute phrase you can come up with.

I’m sorry that vexes you so much, but it’s the reality as long as the county isn’t dictating which schools kids can attend.


You sound biased, not educated.


Experienced and well educated, if you must know.


Neither are an excuse for blatant bias.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Kids are compared against their peers in their high school first. So yes standing out gives one an advantage in college admissions.

Many FCPS high schools are schools within schools. A group going on to college, a group taking advantage of vocational training opportunities and a group where high school is the terminal education point.

Having a 1580 SAT and a 4.5 GPA at West Potomac is going to stand out more than those same figures at TJ or McLean or Langley.


It’s less likely you’ll end up with that 1580 SAT if you’ve come up through the West Potomac pyramid. And only a few schools are going to care about making sure they offer seats to kids from every FCPS high school.


Bullshit. Pyramids don’t produce 1580’s. Paying for tutoring does.


We’d see better NMSF/CS results at the lower ranked schools if all the UMC families needed to do was buy into those schools and then pay for tutoring.

Nope, if you want to prepare your kids well, you make sure they attend schools with high performing peers, not schools that focus on the bare minimum needed to get kids to graduate.



Yeah you still don’t get it. When you have an entire school trying to buy prestige, you have some success stats to cherry pick. When most of the school can’t do that, you can’t cherry pick the few that have resources. Not EVERY rich kid can buy success. But out of an entire school is rich kids you can purchase some 1580’s.


What you don’t get is that the most educated parents in the county consistently prefer, given a choice, that their kids attend schools with a culture of academic excellence, rather than attend schools where the primary focus is on getting kids to pass SOLs and graduate and the more affluent parents look down on most of the kids as an undifferentiated group of low achievers who exist merely to make their own kids look better by comparison. They want strong schools, not “schools within a school” or whatever other cute phrase you can come up with.

I’m sorry that vexes you so much, but it’s the reality as long as the county isn’t dictating which schools kids can attend.


You sound biased, not educated.


Experienced and well educated, if you must know.


Neither are an excuse for blatant bias.


Please. You were the ones resorting to the usual tropes about the purported advantages of sending your higher SES kids to lower performing schools. They don't align with reality or the preferences of most parents with options. We know you do this because you want more high-SES families at your schools, but history says it won't work.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Kids are compared against their peers in their high school first. So yes standing out gives one an advantage in college admissions.

Many FCPS high schools are schools within schools. A group going on to college, a group taking advantage of vocational training opportunities and a group where high school is the terminal education point.

Having a 1580 SAT and a 4.5 GPA at West Potomac is going to stand out more than those same figures at TJ or McLean or Langley.


It’s less likely you’ll end up with that 1580 SAT if you’ve come up through the West Potomac pyramid. And only a few schools are going to care about making sure they offer seats to kids from every FCPS high school.


Bullshit. Pyramids don’t produce 1580’s. Paying for tutoring does.


We’d see better NMSF/CS results at the lower ranked schools if all the UMC families needed to do was buy into those schools and then pay for tutoring.

Nope, if you want to prepare your kids well, you make sure they attend schools with high performing peers, not schools that focus on the bare minimum needed to get kids to graduate.



Yeah you still don’t get it. When you have an entire school trying to buy prestige, you have some success stats to cherry pick. When most of the school can’t do that, you can’t cherry pick the few that have resources. Not EVERY rich kid can buy success. But out of an entire school is rich kids you can purchase some 1580’s.


What you don’t get is that the most educated parents in the county consistently prefer, given a choice, that their kids attend schools with a culture of academic excellence, rather than attend schools where the primary focus is on getting kids to pass SOLs and graduate and the more affluent parents look down on most of the kids as an undifferentiated group of low achievers who exist merely to make their own kids look better by comparison. They want strong schools, not “schools within a school” or whatever other cute phrase you can come up with.

I’m sorry that vexes you so much, but it’s the reality as long as the county isn’t dictating which schools kids can attend.


You sound biased, not educated.


Experienced and well educated, if you must know.


Neither are an excuse for blatant bias.


Please. You were the ones resorting to the usual tropes about the purported advantages of sending your higher SES kids to lower performing schools. They don't align with reality or the preferences of most parents with options. We know you do this because you want more high-SES families at your schools, but history says it won't work.


Speak for yourself. One day your kid might be on a bus to Herndon or Lewis.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Kids are compared against their peers in their high school first. So yes standing out gives one an advantage in college admissions.

Many FCPS high schools are schools within schools. A group going on to college, a group taking advantage of vocational training opportunities and a group where high school is the terminal education point.

Having a 1580 SAT and a 4.5 GPA at West Potomac is going to stand out more than those same figures at TJ or McLean or Langley.


It’s less likely you’ll end up with that 1580 SAT if you’ve come up through the West Potomac pyramid. And only a few schools are going to care about making sure they offer seats to kids from every FCPS high school.


Bullshit. Pyramids don’t produce 1580’s. Paying for tutoring does.


We’d see better NMSF/CS results at the lower ranked schools if all the UMC families needed to do was buy into those schools and then pay for tutoring.

Nope, if you want to prepare your kids well, you make sure they attend schools with high performing peers, not schools that focus on the bare minimum needed to get kids to graduate.



Yeah you still don’t get it. When you have an entire school trying to buy prestige, you have some success stats to cherry pick. When most of the school can’t do that, you can’t cherry pick the few that have resources. Not EVERY rich kid can buy success. But out of an entire school is rich kids you can purchase some 1580’s.


What you don’t get is that the most educated parents in the county consistently prefer, given a choice, that their kids attend schools with a culture of academic excellence, rather than attend schools where the primary focus is on getting kids to pass SOLs and graduate and the more affluent parents look down on most of the kids as an undifferentiated group of low achievers who exist merely to make their own kids look better by comparison. They want strong schools, not “schools within a school” or whatever other cute phrase you can come up with.

I’m sorry that vexes you so much, but it’s the reality as long as the county isn’t dictating which schools kids can attend.


You sound biased, not educated.


Experienced and well educated, if you must know.


Neither are an excuse for blatant bias.


Please. You were the ones resorting to the usual tropes about the purported advantages of sending your higher SES kids to lower performing schools. They don't align with reality or the preferences of most parents with options. We know you do this because you want more high-SES families at your schools, but history says it won't work.


Speak for yourself. One day your kid might be on a bus to Herndon or Lewis.


I won't let that happen, nor will I make phony claims that it would give them an advantage over kids at higher rated schools.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:What's interesting to me is how hard certain people come down on lower SES schools.

You want your kid to go to a higher SES school? That's great! Good for you! You do you.

But those same folks continually disparage those who attend lower SES schools and are happy and successful there. I wonder why. Is it an insecurity thing? You want to believe that you made the right decision? You feel the best way you can do it is to put down anyone who takes a different track in life? You continue to play the same recording of negativity, over and over, and you don't want to listen to anyone who says it's not like that.

I went to a lower SES school, got scholarship that paid for most of my undergrad, then a full-ride scholarship for my master's degree. My family is definitely UMC, and I mean upper. My kids are at a school with low SES kids, and they're doing great. To be honest, I'm more comfortable with the lower SES community.

So let me encourage you to continue to do you. Live where you want. And I don't know your kid, but I hope they turn out just fine.


By all means make the best of your personal situation. Just stop the BS that attending a lower SES school is a big advantage when it comes to college preparation and admissions. Those of us with direct personal experience with different pyramids in FCPS know that's the exception, not the rule.

And, of course, there's an irony is touting the "school within the school" at the lower SES schools and then claiming you've immersed yourself in a "lower SES community."



Of course students who have the qualifications/aptitude at the “lower performing” schools have an advantage in college admissions, simply because there is a higher concentration of applicants from the schools you see as “superior”.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:What's interesting to me is how hard certain people come down on lower SES schools.

You want your kid to go to a higher SES school? That's great! Good for you! You do you.

But those same folks continually disparage those who attend lower SES schools and are happy and successful there. I wonder why. Is it an insecurity thing? You want to believe that you made the right decision? You feel the best way you can do it is to put down anyone who takes a different track in life? You continue to play the same recording of negativity, over and over, and you don't want to listen to anyone who says it's not like that.

I went to a lower SES school, got scholarship that paid for most of my undergrad, then a full-ride scholarship for my master's degree. My family is definitely UMC, and I mean upper. My kids are at a school with low SES kids, and they're doing great. To be honest, I'm more comfortable with the lower SES community.

So let me encourage you to continue to do you. Live where you want. And I don't know your kid, but I hope they turn out just fine.


By all means make the best of your personal situation. Just stop the BS that attending a lower SES school is a big advantage when it comes to college preparation and admissions. Those of us with direct personal experience with different pyramids in FCPS know that's the exception, not the rule.

And, of course, there's an irony is touting the "school within the school" at the lower SES schools and then claiming you've immersed yourself in a "lower SES community."



Of course students who have the qualifications/aptitude at the “lower performing” schools have an advantage in college admissions, simply because there is a higher concentration of applicants from the schools you see as “superior”.


The students at the lower ranked schools are less likely to end up with similar qualifications as the students at higher ranked schools with similar raw ability, and most top schools would prefer to take multiple kids with superior qualifications coming from a top HS over a kid with inferior qualifications coming from a low performing HS. They are looking at their larger applicant pool and don’t have quotas to admit kids from low performing public high schools.

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:People at lower SES schools have a greater chance of getting into the advanced band/orchestra earlier in the high school career, and thus receive the higher GPA boost.

People at lower SES schools have a greater chance of making the varsity sports teams earlier.

People at lower SES schools have a chance at obtaining leadership positions in sports and music. They have a greater chance at starring roles in drama.

Those are all things that look great on a college application.

Competition is fierce at the higher SES schools for leadership positions, sports teams, and music programs. On top of having to juggle an advanced academics course. Some kids thrive in that kind of cut-throat environment. Some kids don't.


This assumes a child can remain impervious to his or her environment and refuse to be influenced by it.
Anonymous
Not this again!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:What's interesting to me is how hard certain people come down on lower SES schools.

You want your kid to go to a higher SES school? That's great! Good for you! You do you.

But those same folks continually disparage those who attend lower SES schools and are happy and successful there. I wonder why. Is it an insecurity thing? You want to believe that you made the right decision? You feel the best way you can do it is to put down anyone who takes a different track in life? You continue to play the same recording of negativity, over and over, and you don't want to listen to anyone who says it's not like that.

I went to a lower SES school, got scholarship that paid for most of my undergrad, then a full-ride scholarship for my master's degree. My family is definitely UMC, and I mean upper. My kids are at a school with low SES kids, and they're doing great. To be honest, I'm more comfortable with the lower SES community.

So let me encourage you to continue to do you. Live where you want. And I don't know your kid, but I hope they turn out just fine.


By all means make the best of your personal situation. Just stop the BS that attending a lower SES school is a big advantage when it comes to college preparation and admissions. Those of us with direct personal experience with different pyramids in FCPS know that's the exception, not the rule.

And, of course, there's an irony is touting the "school within the school" at the lower SES schools and then claiming you've immersed yourself in a "lower SES community."



Of course students who have the qualifications/aptitude at the “lower performing” schools have an advantage in college admissions, simply because there is a higher concentration of applicants from the schools you see as “superior”.


The students at the lower ranked schools are less likely to end up with similar qualifications as the students at higher ranked schools with similar raw ability, and most top schools would prefer to take multiple kids with superior qualifications coming from a top HS over a kid with inferior qualifications coming from a low performing HS. They are looking at their larger applicant pool and don’t have quotas to admit kids from low performing public high schools.



Hmm, not what I am seeing. You are very out of touch.
post reply Forum Index » Fairfax County Public Schools (FCPS)
Message Quick Reply
Go to: