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Reply to "National Merit Semifinalist for DMV Private Schools"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous] [quote]The way this works is all so screwy. My kid missed the cutoff in DC by one point. He would be a NMSF if he went to school in VA or MD. Doesn't seem to make much sense. Oh well...[/quote] Oh well indeed. He did not make the cut with his DC cohort. Everyone can find another cohort to make the cut with ... Alabama, Montana, or prison (GED)!! What's so screwy about not making the bar in one's cohort? Get a life folk. Be grateful for your own unique gifts.[/quote] It's not that he didn't make the cut in the DC cohort...for some random reason, the cutoff for DC is automatically the cutoff of the highest state. DC kids aren't compared to other DC kids. This year, they were compared to NJ kids, last year MD kids, etc. I don't understand why DC kids are held to this higher standard. It's not logical.[/quote] Sure it is. [b]Without this rule, the DC cut off would be even higher based on the relatively large number of extremely high scorers.[/b] Tying DC to The highest state is giving DC a slight break.[/quote] This is sarcasm, right? But in case it is not, DC cut-off would have been much much lower without tying it to the highest state.[/quote] No, it is true. If DC's segment were allocated by percentage of total graduating seniors in U.S. like the rest of the country, we would only have 16 NMSF, and the cut scores would be based on the top dozen or so test takers in DC. That would be a very high score. Using the highest state cut lets more DC kid qualify. DC usually has 30-40 when you use the current method, as opposed to the 16 we'd get under the state allocation method.[/quote]
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