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Reply to "Are the new 9th graders the top of the class?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Thinking about applications to various schools next year and how to think about the later grades and whether to do K8 or K12. Not sure if there is any way to know this, but are the kids who enter at 9th grade typically the strongest academically in the more competitive schools? I mean, in a K12, does it generally track that the later the student enters, the stronger academically they have to be? Or does it not really work like that because the more competitive schools are really good at teaching the kids they have so they all kind of even out?[/quote] Yes. It is very clear in everything not just academics. [b]The new kids entering in 9th grade push the lifers to the side. It is not even close.[/b] The most competitive schools are picking the very top students and athletes. [/quote] +1000, the [b]arriving 9th graders[/b] have been chosen to cover a variety of niches and [b]many, many excel[/b][/quote] Presence of parents with kids who entered a top school in 9th is strong for this topic! LOL. Reality is some of those entering in 9th will be among top in class, as will be many who are lifers/entered earlier. Many of those entering in 9th will also be pretty strong academically but admitted for their athletic abilities in a particular sport or talent in robotics/music, etc. At our top K-12, the vast majority of the kids at the top of the class (attending Ivies/Top Colleges) entered the school in the early (think 4th and lower) grades. Contrary to what everyone wants to believe, the top privates are not just looking for academic powerhouses. They want kids who will do well academically (they need to be able to handle the work), but are well-rounded and will contribute in other ways to the community, too.[/quote] The problem with being lifer, especially a lifer who got a leg up through legacy or being a sibling, is that it can be harder to leave if everything isn’t going well. Schools can be more reluctant to intervene and so can parents. [/quote]
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