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Reply to "TJ Class 2025 Admission Data"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]The 1.5% is for calculating the number of spots allotted to each middle school. Each school gets spots amounting to 1.5% of the eighth grade class.[/quote] No. It is the top 1.5% are guaranteed seats if they apply. And Students have to have a 3.5 GPA and taken Algebra Honors. I get that there are people on this board who think that is amazingly easy but there are plenty of kids who will not meet one or both of those requirements. The schools that send the fewest students probably have a much larger number of kids who will not have taken Algebra or have a 3.5 GPA. Heck, I know kids at Carson that will not take Algebra until 9th grade. Step out of your little bubble and realize that the vast majority of people are not interested in TJ and that the kids that you are so afraid of taking a spot at TJ are not going to be handed it simply because they are attending a school with very few kids at TJ. [/quote] Alright - this is from the actual TJ Admissions Website (tjadmissions.org): Allocated Seats - Our selection process will ensure seats are allocated to all public schools based on 1.5% of their 8th grade student population. Students with the strongest evaluated applications will be [i]offered admissions up to the number allocated to each public school[/i]. All remaining eligible students will compete for unallocated seats and/or be placed in the waitpool. [b]In the event a school does not have enough students to fill the allocated seats, the remaining unfilled seats will be included in the unallocated selection process[/b]. The 1.5% is designed to provide more proportional opportunities from each of our public middle schools. Unallocated Seats - Our selection process includes unallocated seats that are not assigned to any specific public middle school. These seats are offered to the highest evaluated applicants who were not offered an allocated seat at the student's school. This is not especially well-written, but I think the most commonsense reading of this is: If Public School X has 600 students in 8th grade, they will have 9 allocated seats regardless of county. If they have 9 or fewer applications that are qualified for TJ based on the admissions standards, those 9 students will be offered admission. If any of them decline, those seats will become unallocated seats, likely allowing schools like Carson and Longfellow, and perhaps the high-end privates to pick up some more spots. If they have more than 9, the students will be ranked top to bottom and they will be offered admission in order of ranking until those seats are filled.[/quote] Yep. There will be a large number of schools in Loudoun and (especially) Prince William counties that do not fill their allotment - historically, in many of those cases significantly less than 1.5% of their 8th grade class has even applied. Indeed, in PW there will be several schools that do not occupy a single seat in the Class of 2025 - to say nothing of the number of students who will turn down their offer of admission.[/quote] I believe the 1.5% per school only applies to FCPS. The other counties have a certain number of seats alloted to the entire county. The allotments are far fewer than 1.5% of the 8th grade student body.[/quote] I had thought this was the case too, but found no evidence to support that it only applied to FCPS.[/quote] Do the math. Arlington has 7 middle schools that average at least 300-400 students in 8th grade each. That would be 3.5-6 students in the top 1.5% per school. Multiply by 7 and you get 24.5 to 42 students. Arlington is capped at 20 seats. Even if you are in the top 1.5% for your middle school, Getting in to TJ is very, very difficult. [/quote] There are actually six in Arlington - Williamsburg, Swanson, Jefferson, Gunston, Kenmore, and the newly opened Dorothy Hamm. Hamm is located at the old HB Woodlawn site and geographically, one would expect its population to be fairly affluent. It is a shame that Arlington doesn't get more seats at TJ, as its delegation tends to be among the strongest at the school.[/quote] 7 - you forgot HB Woodlawn. And you need to consider private school kids that live in Arlington (some attend BASIS in McLean).[/quote]
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