Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:IB at RM is incredibly hard.
DC is at RMIB. DC has met a few people who were in IB programs elsewhere, and they said that RMIB is much tougher than what they have experienced at their other school -- I don't recall if it was another MCPS school or not.
RMIB definitely has a reputation for being tough. Tons of work. Yes, the materials are probably very similar to other IB programs, but I don't know if the expectations and workload are similar.
Anonymous wrote:IB at RM is incredibly hard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The only difference is that the RM program is more established and attracts the top scoring kids as a result.
So what does that mean? Better teachers? Better administration?
Anonymous wrote:RM is open to the whole county and application is competitive whereas Kennedy is for the school (I don't see that it has an application).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The only difference is that the RM program is more established and attracts the top scoring kids as a result.
So what does that mean? Better teachers? Better administration?
It means more experienced, just that. And a very high-achieving, but also highly competitive, cohort.
They are both the same program. Both have an application. One is countywide, one is regional. Anyone (county wide) can apply to RM, only those who live in the BCC, Churchill, Whitman, Walter Johnson clusters or the Downcounty Consortium can apply.
The cohorts will be slightly different, but the course offerings very similar. If your kid is doing the HS application I'd have them check both off and see what happens. It sounds like each is looked at independently, so your kid might have a choice between the two- it doesn't take any more work to apply to both.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The only difference is that the RM program is more established and attracts the top scoring kids as a result.
So what does that mean? Better teachers? Better administration?
It means more experienced, just that. And a very high-achieving, but also highly competitive, cohort.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The only difference is that the RM program is more established and attracts the top scoring kids as a result.
So what does that mean? Better teachers? Better administration?
Anonymous wrote:The only difference is that the RM program is more established and attracts the top scoring kids as a result.