Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Keep in mind it is a lottery if you don't live in bounds.
It is not selective, and 80% of students are inbounds and have no choice but to go there. This means that the 20% remaining are the ones carrying the program in terms of motivation and drive.
Academically, it is not better or worse than other schools in the area.
We had considered the Parklawn (?) aerospace magnet and decided against it, both for commute and because of the "fluff" factor - one can't do real aerospace engineering without solid knowledge in hard sciences which middle schoolers in MCPS do not have. It seems to me these magnets are geared toward average students who need special motivation to apply themselves at school.
Oh dear God. Please stop.
OP, if you're interested, please talk to parents who actually have kids enrolled in the school, not those who make sweeping generalizations and have no actual connection to the school you (and your DC) are interested in.
Calm down, PP. I'm analyzing facts. Not a fan of these supposed "magnets". I wish they were selective, and then they would be worth something.
Anonymous wrote:
Keep in mind it is a lottery if you don't live in bounds.
It is not selective, and 80% of students are inbounds and have no choice but to go there. This means that the 20% remaining are the ones carrying the program in terms of motivation and drive.
Academically, it is not better or worse than other schools in the area.
We had considered the Parklawn (?) aerospace magnet and decided against it, both for commute and because of the "fluff" factor - one can't do real aerospace engineering without solid knowledge in hard sciences which middle schoolers in MCPS do not have. It seems to me these magnets are geared toward average students who need special motivation to apply themselves at school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Keep in mind it is a lottery if you don't live in bounds.
It is not selective, and 80% of students are inbounds and have no choice but to go there. This means that the 20% remaining are the ones carrying the program in terms of motivation and drive.
Academically, it is not better or worse than other schools in the area.
We had considered the Parklawn (?) aerospace magnet and decided against it, both for commute and because of the "fluff" factor - one can't do real aerospace engineering without solid knowledge in hard sciences which middle schoolers in MCPS do not have. It seems to me these magnets are geared toward average students who need special motivation to apply themselves at school.
Oh dear God. Please stop.
OP, if you're interested, please talk to parents who actually have kids enrolled in the school, not those who make sweeping generalizations and have no actual connection to the school you (and your DC) are interested in.
Anonymous wrote:
Keep in mind it is a lottery if you don't live in bounds.
It is not selective, and 80% of students are inbounds and have no choice but to go there. This means that the 20% remaining are the ones carrying the program in terms of motivation and drive.
Academically, it is not better or worse than other schools in the area.
We had considered the Parklawn (?) aerospace magnet and decided against it, both for commute and because of the "fluff" factor - one can't do real aerospace engineering without solid knowledge in hard sciences which middle schoolers in MCPS do not have. It seems to me these magnets are geared toward average students who need special motivation to apply themselves at school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's a random lottery, not a test or portfolio/audition. I know some folks who have tried it instead of TPMS but all have ended up coming back to TMPS for 7th. The commute is just too much for families coming from TP/SS, and TPMS has a great drama and orchestra program.
Loiderman is in Silver Spring
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's a random lottery, not a test or portfolio/audition. I know some folks who have tried it instead of TPMS but all have ended up coming back to TMPS for 7th. The commute is just too much for families coming from TP/SS, and TPMS has a great drama and orchestra program.
Loiderman is in Silver Spring
And Silver Spring covers a huge portion of the county. We live in Silver Spring, and didn't apply because it would have taken about 30 minutes to get DD to Loiderman, and then we would need to retrace that 30 minutes before even starting a commute into DC.
Anonymous wrote:You apply via the regular application due in early November. Regular, meaning it's joint with the other MS magnets.
http://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/schools/loiedermanms/magnet/program.aspx
http://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/schools/msmagnet/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's a random lottery, not a test or portfolio/audition. I know some folks who have tried it instead of TPMS but all have ended up coming back to TMPS for 7th. The commute is just too much for families coming from TP/SS, and TPMS has a great drama and orchestra program.
Loiderman is in Silver Spring
Anonymous wrote:It's a random lottery, not a test or portfolio/audition. I know some folks who have tried it instead of TPMS but all have ended up coming back to TMPS for 7th. The commute is just too much for families coming from TP/SS, and TPMS has a great drama and orchestra program.