Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DC with very similar stats was rejected from Longfellow but I think your child has an excellent chance of being admitted. Good luck!
Did you end up sending your kid to McLean or did you find another school? How is it working out?
We are appalled by the arrogant, dismissive attitude of the school board member about the overcrowding there and not sure we can stomach sending DC there.
Except, the admins at those schools will know who just moved in. There will not be enough data from one semester. You have to move in 7th.Anonymous wrote:Is your child in 7th grade? If so, do not be surprised if there are a bunch of kids who enroll for 8th grade.
There is a list of middle schools where kids can be admitted easily.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a child at poorly performing MS which, prior to the admission policy change, typically did not have any students admitted to TJ. DC is truly a brilliant and hardworking kid - the top student in honors geometry (near perfect average), acing the rest of their all honors courses, all advanced pass or perfect SOL scores, etc. DC is white and we do not qualify for free/reduced priced meals.
I'm curious to know what the admittance pool looks like at a school like ours? Do we have a shot or are the spots typically offered to high performing students with one or more "experience factors"?
I hope to keep the conversation civil and am genuinely asking out of curiosity. TIA!
One from ours was such an outlier. Real genius even. Don't think they would've stood a chance with the old system though since their family is low-income and wouldn't even consider prep classes that were required to be competitive then.
Prep was never necessary. My two kids and many others did no prep. Stop with those lies.
OP, your kid should do well coming from a low performing school. It’s the kids like yours at high performing schools that are getting rejected.
Anonymous wrote:You should apply. Admissions rules have been changed. Now each feeder school is allocated a certain percentage of students that are admitted— something like 4%. For most schools, that means about 4-6 kids per school. So, my understanding is that kids from all FCPS MS will be represented. At least that’s what the presentation said
Of course, this may change pending Ct decision
Anonymous wrote:My DC with very similar stats was rejected from Longfellow but I think your child has an excellent chance of being admitted. Good luck!
Anonymous wrote:You should apply. Admissions rules have been changed. Now each feeder school is allocated a certain percentage of students that are admitted— something like 4%. For most schools, that means about 4-6 kids per school. So, my understanding is that kids from all FCPS MS will be represented. At least that’s what the presentation said
Of course, this may change pending Ct decision
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a child at poorly performing MS which, prior to the admission policy change, typically did not have any students admitted to TJ. DC is truly a brilliant and hardworking kid - the top student in honors geometry (near perfect average), acing the rest of their all honors courses, all advanced pass or perfect SOL scores, etc. DC is white and we do not qualify for free/reduced priced meals.
I'm curious to know what the admittance pool looks like at a school like ours? Do we have a shot or are the spots typically offered to high performing students with one or more "experience factors"?
I hope to keep the conversation civil and am genuinely asking out of curiosity. TIA!
One from ours was such an outlier. Real genius even. Don't think they would've stood a chance with the old system though since their family is low-income and wouldn't even consider prep classes that were required to be competitive then.
Prep was never necessary. My two kids and many others did no prep. Stop with those lies.
OP, your kid should do well coming from a low performing school. It’s the kids like yours at high performing schools that are getting rejected.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a child at poorly performing MS which, prior to the admission policy change, typically did not have any students admitted to TJ. DC is truly a brilliant and hardworking kid - the top student in honors geometry (near perfect average), acing the rest of their all honors courses, all advanced pass or perfect SOL scores, etc. DC is white and we do not qualify for free/reduced priced meals.
I'm curious to know what the admittance pool looks like at a school like ours? Do we have a shot or are the spots typically offered to high performing students with one or more "experience factors"?
I hope to keep the conversation civil and am genuinely asking out of curiosity. TIA!
One from ours was such an outlier. Real genius even. Don't think they would've stood a chance with the old system though since their family is low-income and wouldn't even consider prep classes that were required to be competitive then.
Anonymous wrote:I have a child at poorly performing MS which, prior to the admission policy change, typically did not have any students admitted to TJ. DC is truly a brilliant and hardworking kid - the top student in honors geometry (near perfect average), acing the rest of their all honors courses, all advanced pass or perfect SOL scores, etc. DC is white and we do not qualify for free/reduced priced meals.
I'm curious to know what the admittance pool looks like at a school like ours? Do we have a shot or are the spots typically offered to high performing students with one or more "experience factors"?
I hope to keep the conversation civil and am genuinely asking out of curiosity. TIA!