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Reply to "TJ decisions are out"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]If grades are awesome and the scores are brilliant, then the only reason has to be the SIS or the recs. Perhaps the recommendations aren’t as excellent as you think, or the child didn’t actually want to go and that was reflected in the SIS[/quote] +1. The three test scores are only part of it! Grades, SIS, teacher recs are considered in addition. Those of you posting three test scores are missing the point. [/quote] The point is that most weight is given to subjective scoring of essays/SIS. It is certainly not choosing The top stem candidates [/quote] TJ no longer seems to be a STEM school at this point. I think this is good and bad but it looks like they are more about creating a well balanced instead of kids who are interested in STEM which I thought was a prerequisite since it is a STEM school One possible strategy is that they take semi finalists off of test scores but then for who gets in it's much more subjective which might be how they are weeding out the cookie cutter hard core STEM folks but again why call it a STEM school if you aren't taking people actually interest in STEM[/quote] Go and actually read TJ’s mission statement. It’s a much richer curriculum than just STEM. They do a lot of group projects. Put an emphasis on fine arts and language, and require the rigorous blocked humanities. Discuss and debate and do so f——g many PowerPoint presentations your head would spin. There is a lot more going on than who is the best mathbot. And more tears shed in many houses about APUSH than Math. Whether they are interested or not, no one gets out of TJ without the equivalent of 7 STEM APs: CS, Calc, Stats, Bio, Chem, Physics I and Geoscience (with the TJ intro science classes being taught from the AP books at the intro level. And a physics and geosciences curriculum they train other schools from around the work on). Plus design tech. Plus a year long senior research project. Bare minimum for every single kid. So yes— it’s a STEM school. But, it’s not just a STEM school. [/quote]
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