Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They do not determine who is in the top 1.5%. They look at the number of students in the grade (say 1,000) and will admit at least 15 from that school ( .015 x 1,000).Anonymous wrote:New to TJ. What does the following mean?
Is this the GPA score? How does TJ know who are in the top 1.5 percent of a class?
guaranteeing each public middle school seats for its top applicants in a number equal to 1.5% of the eighth-grade class;
But the 15 are the very best 15 applicants from that school.
NO, they just take 15 students from that school as min.
YES they are the very BEST 15.
those are NOT THE BEST but just good enough to meet the reqirement
According to the selection committee which has access to all the information these ARE THE BEST.
But, they don't. They only have access to GPA and a few brief essays. They do not have access to any lists of courses taken, SOL scores, significant achievements, or teacher recommendations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They do not determine who is in the top 1.5%. They look at the number of students in the grade (say 1,000) and will admit at least 15 from that school ( .015 x 1,000).Anonymous wrote:New to TJ. What does the following mean?
Is this the GPA score? How does TJ know who are in the top 1.5 percent of a class?
guaranteeing each public middle school seats for its top applicants in a number equal to 1.5% of the eighth-grade class;
But the 15 are the very best 15 applicants from that school.
NO, they just take 15 students from that school as min.
YES they are the very BEST 15.
those are NOT THE BEST but just good enough to meet the reqirement
According to the selection committee which has access to all the information these ARE THE BEST.
It kind of depends on how you define “the best”.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They do not determine who is in the top 1.5%. They look at the number of students in the grade (say 1,000) and will admit at least 15 from that school ( .015 x 1,000).Anonymous wrote:New to TJ. What does the following mean?
Is this the GPA score? How does TJ know who are in the top 1.5 percent of a class?
guaranteeing each public middle school seats for its top applicants in a number equal to 1.5% of the eighth-grade class;
But the 15 are the very best 15 applicants from that school.
NO, they just take 15 students from that school as min.
YES they are the very BEST 15.
those are NOT THE BEST but just good enough to meet the reqirement
According to the selection committee which has access to all the information these ARE THE BEST.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They do not determine who is in the top 1.5%. They look at the number of students in the grade (say 1,000) and will admit at least 15 from that school ( .015 x 1,000).Anonymous wrote:New to TJ. What does the following mean?
Is this the GPA score? How does TJ know who are in the top 1.5 percent of a class?
guaranteeing each public middle school seats for its top applicants in a number equal to 1.5% of the eighth-grade class;
But the 15 are the very best 15 applicants from that school.
NO, they just take 15 students from that school as min.
YES they are the very BEST 15.
those are NOT THE BEST but just good enough to meet the reqirement
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They do not determine who is in the top 1.5%. They look at the number of students in the grade (say 1,000) and will admit at least 15 from that school ( .015 x 1,000).Anonymous wrote:New to TJ. What does the following mean?
Is this the GPA score? How does TJ know who are in the top 1.5 percent of a class?
guaranteeing each public middle school seats for its top applicants in a number equal to 1.5% of the eighth-grade class;
But the 15 are the very best 15 applicants from that school.
NO, they just take 15 students from that school as min.
YES they are the very BEST 15.
Anonymous wrote:Correct, and the key word is applicants, some students in the top 1.5% will not apply.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They do not determine who is in the top 1.5%. They look at the number of students in the grade (say 1,000) and will admit at least 15 from that school ( .015 x 1,000).Anonymous wrote:New to TJ. What does the following mean?
Is this the GPA score? How does TJ know who are in the top 1.5 percent of a class?
guaranteeing each public middle school seats for its top applicants in a number equal to 1.5% of the eighth-grade class;
But the 15 are the very best 15 applicants from that school.
Anonymous wrote:Correct, and the key word is applicants, some students in the top 1.5% will not apply.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They do not determine who is in the top 1.5%. They look at the number of students in the grade (say 1,000) and will admit at least 15 from that school ( .015 x 1,000).Anonymous wrote:New to TJ. What does the following mean?
Is this the GPA score? How does TJ know who are in the top 1.5 percent of a class?
guaranteeing each public middle school seats for its top applicants in a number equal to 1.5% of the eighth-grade class;
But the 15 are the very best 15 applicants from that school.
Correct, and the key word is applicants, some students in the top 1.5% will not apply.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They do not determine who is in the top 1.5%. They look at the number of students in the grade (say 1,000) and will admit at least 15 from that school ( .015 x 1,000).Anonymous wrote:New to TJ. What does the following mean?
Is this the GPA score? How does TJ know who are in the top 1.5 percent of a class?
guaranteeing each public middle school seats for its top applicants in a number equal to 1.5% of the eighth-grade class;
But the 15 are the very best 15 applicants from that school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They do not determine who is in the top 1.5%. They look at the number of students in the grade (say 1,000) and will admit at least 15 from that school ( .015 x 1,000).Anonymous wrote:New to TJ. What does the following mean?
Is this the GPA score? How does TJ know who are in the top 1.5 percent of a class?
guaranteeing each public middle school seats for its top applicants in a number equal to 1.5% of the eighth-grade class;
But the 15 are the very best 15 applicants from that school.
NO, they just take 15 students from that school as min.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They do not determine who is in the top 1.5%. They look at the number of students in the grade (say 1,000) and will admit at least 15 from that school ( .015 x 1,000).Anonymous wrote:New to TJ. What does the following mean?
Is this the GPA score? How does TJ know who are in the top 1.5 percent of a class?
guaranteeing each public middle school seats for its top applicants in a number equal to 1.5% of the eighth-grade class;
But the 15 are the very best 15 applicants from that school.
Anonymous wrote:They do not determine who is in the top 1.5%. They look at the number of students in the grade (say 1,000) and will admit at least 15 from that school ( .015 x 1,000).Anonymous wrote:New to TJ. What does the following mean?
Is this the GPA score? How does TJ know who are in the top 1.5 percent of a class?
guaranteeing each public middle school seats for its top applicants in a number equal to 1.5% of the eighth-grade class;
They do not determine who is in the top 1.5%. They look at the number of students in the grade (say 1,000) and will admit at least 15 from that school ( .015 x 1,000).Anonymous wrote:New to TJ. What does the following mean?
Is this the GPA score? How does TJ know who are in the top 1.5 percent of a class?
guaranteeing each public middle school seats for its top applicants in a number equal to 1.5% of the eighth-grade class;