Anonymous wrote:And our DC is laid back, smart, into a lot of things including STEM (has been involved in community theater and school drama, Model UN, odd sports), is very gifted in languages ... and is going to TJ. DC's looking forward to the challenge. DC would do great at the home school (Langley), was accepted to great private schools, but chose TJ because of the unique experience there. Where else can you combine Chemistry and Humanities for an amazing cross-curricular course? Where else do they offer BioNanoTechnology?
Anonymous wrote:And our DC is laid back, smart, into a lot of things including STEM (has been involved in community theater and school drama, Model UN, odd sports), is very gifted in languages ... and is going to TJ. DC's looking forward to the challenge. DC would do great at the home school (Langley), was accepted to great private schools, but chose TJ because of the unique experience there. Where else can you combine Chemistry and Humanities for an amazing cross-curricular course? Where else do they offer BioNanoTechnology?
Anonymous wrote:And our DC is laid back, smart, into a lot of things including STEM (has been involved in community theater and school drama, Model UN, odd sports), is very gifted in languages ... and is going to TJ. DC's looking forward to the challenge. DC would do great at the home school (Langley), was accepted to great private schools, but chose TJ because of the unique experience there. Where else can you combine Chemistry and Humanities for an amazing cross-curricular course? Where else do they offer BioNanoTechnology?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just curious if any parents or students regretted their decision of not accepting admission and stayed with the base school instead. TIA
This is a difficult question since presumably the initial decision was made for a variety of reasons including deciding TJ was not a good fit for the child. The child would probably do well at the base school (TJ students moving back to base school from TJ for academic reasons usually make top 10%) so there would be no apparent reason to second guess the decision and the child would also do relatively well in college admissions.
The significant questions remaining are a) would the child have received better education and b) would the child have gone further in challenging him/ herself with the more rigorous academic standard/environment? One would never know since the child did not attend.
Anonymous wrote:Just curious if any parents or students regretted their decision of not accepting admission and stayed with the base school instead. TIA
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:About 95% accept the admission offer so the number not accepting the offer is very low each year.
I wonder what % of the kids accepted transfer back to their base schools after 1-2 years...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:About 95% accept the admission offer so the number not accepting the offer is very low each year.
I wonder what % of the kids accepted transfer back to their base schools after 1-2 years...
Anonymous wrote:About 95% accept the admission offer so the number not accepting the offer is very low each year.
Anonymous wrote:It's been a while. My daughter is a college senior this year. No regrets. I honestly do not think it would have been a good fit for her.