Never our experience and the bolded -- first I have ever heard of that. Very odd though it seems as though you may be getting this info from your child and as we all know as parents of teens. They lie - a lot. You can always reach out to a teacher or the counselor if you think there is a problem. |
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https://www2.ed.gov/programs/psp/2017/candidates.pdf
3 from Wilson? |
Good luck to you, PP. Appreciate your candor and pragmatism. Sounds like you want to hire a good college couch, and maybe a writing tutor and/or enroll the kid in summer programs emphasizing writing if you can afford it. I'm going to wager that your kid will land at a great college and thrive there, coming from such a grounded family. |
| college coach |
Last year's female winner was from Wilson. |
Do you think 3 is too few or a lot? |
| I agree with other posters that unfortunately the principal and administrators are focused on the bottom half of the school. The academic content, quality and rigor tend to be pretty low. There are some good teachers but many more mediocre and bad ones. It is important to focus on failing kids but you shouldn't completely ignore the high achievers either. Senior administrators at Wilson are pretty unimpressive. New teacher hires are generally not good which is pretty depressing. It is frustrating because the school has an interesting mix of kids and a lot of potential. |
Too few for a basketball game. Too many for a date. |
What do you think it says about how the school supports its strongest students? |
| It says nothing at all. Super smart and hard working students will do well at any school. There are at least a handful if not more of very impressive kids at Ballou. They should go far in life despite their subpar HS education. |
PP, you sound so much like a charter booster parent. There are so many classes to choose from. You want to take all AP's, you can do so after 9th grade. About 15 students scored perfect on their ACT and SAT. Is that mediocre? |
Then why aren't those 15 students on the Presidential scholar eligibility list, which is based entirely on scores? The list is supposed to be the top 40 scoring students who live in DC. "All graduating high school seniors who are citizens of the United States or legal permanent residents, enrolled in either private or public high schools, and who have scored exceptionally well on either the SAT of the College Board or the ACT Assessment of the American College Testing Program on or before October of each year are automatically considered for participation. The United States Department of Education then examines the test records for the top 30 males and top 30 females in each state/jurisdiction. The combined file of scores from the top male examinees and top female examinees are then ranked from high to low in each state. The scores associated with the top 20 male examinees and top 20 female examinees are used to identify the candidates in each state. When ties occur in the threshold score, more than 20 persons of that gender are invited in that state. In addition, each Chief State School Officer (CSSO) may nominate up to ten male and ten female candidates, residing in the CSSO's jurisdiction, based on their outstanding scholarship. Additionally, the program is partnering with several recognition organizations that will each nominate up to 10 candidates from their individual programs." |
| Does Wilson disclose rank on transcript, i.e. to colleges? |
Exactly right. There are not 15 students at Wilson with perfect scores. There are 3, and 3 only, out of a class of about 445 students. At Banneker, there were 4 out of a class of about 110. At Walls, there are 13 out of about 145. Draw your own conclusions. |
Yes it is on the transcript. |