Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:H-B Woodlawn beats Langley and McLean?
Yes. That's been the case for years.
It also has about 1/6 of the number of students as Langley or McLean.
I thought they are traditionally in the 4th-6th spot range and the only Arlington school in the top ten most years.
No, H-B usually is behind TJ in NoVa, and Yorktown is also always in the top 10 for NoVa. Yorktown would drop out of the top 10 regionally if you added the top schools from suburban Maryland into the mix.
Or had the diversity of some of the other schools...
#scores don't matter for the individual
#kids worse off applying to VA state universities with a homogenous population and quotas
What "quotas"? Are you saying the same number of kids get into U. Va. from Wakefield as from Yorktown? Prove it.
Anyone who has ever worked in college admissions knows this. I worked college admissions, but you can't prove it because it's a dirty secret no one will admit to. It just happens.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:H-B Woodlawn beats Langley and McLean?
Yes. That's been the case for years.
It also has about 1/6 of the number of students as Langley or McLean.
I thought they are traditionally in the 4th-6th spot range and the only Arlington school in the top ten most years.
No, H-B usually is behind TJ in NoVa, and Yorktown is also always in the top 10 for NoVa. Yorktown would drop out of the top 10 regionally if you added the top schools from suburban Maryland into the mix.
Or had the diversity of some of the other schools...
#scores don't matter for the individual
#kids worse off applying to VA state universities with a homogenous population and quotas
What "quotas"? Are you saying the same number of kids get into U. Va. from Wakefield as from Yorktown? Prove it.
Anyone who has ever worked in college admissions knows this. I worked college admissions, but you can't prove it because it's a dirty secret no one will admit to. It just happens.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:H-B Woodlawn beats Langley and McLean?
Yes. That's been the case for years.
It also has about 1/6 of the number of students as Langley or McLean.
I thought they are traditionally in the 4th-6th spot range and the only Arlington school in the top ten most years.
No, H-B usually is behind TJ in NoVa, and Yorktown is also always in the top 10 for NoVa. Yorktown would drop out of the top 10 regionally if you added the top schools from suburban Maryland into the mix.
Or had the diversity of some of the other schools...
#scores don't matter for the individual
#kids worse off applying to VA state universities with a homogenous population and quotas
What "quotas"? Are you saying the same number of kids get into U. Va. from Wakefield as from Yorktown? Prove it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:H-B Woodlawn beats Langley and McLean?
Yes. That's been the case for years.
It also has about 1/6 of the number of students as Langley or McLean.
I thought they are traditionally in the 4th-6th spot range and the only Arlington school in the top ten most years.
No, H-B usually is behind TJ in NoVa, and Yorktown is also always in the top 10 for NoVa. Yorktown would drop out of the top 10 regionally if you added the top schools from suburban Maryland into the mix.
Or had the diversity of some of the other schools...
#scores don't matter for the individual
#kids worse off applying to VA state universities with a homogenous population and quotas
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:H-B Woodlawn beats Langley and McLean?
Yes. That's been the case for years.
It also has about 1/6 of the number of students as Langley or McLean.
I thought they are traditionally in the 4th-6th spot range and the only Arlington school in the top ten most years.
No, H-B usually is behind TJ in NoVa, and Yorktown is also always in the top 10 for NoVa. Yorktown would drop out of the top 10 regionally if you added the top schools from suburban Maryland into the mix.
Anonymous wrote:W-L highly diverse compared to YHS and the like. Having an AVERAGE score only 50 points lower is very impressive. In fact, when demographics are aligned scores are greater.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:H-B Woodlawn beats Langley and McLean?
Yes. That's been the case for years.
It also has about 1/6 of the number of students as Langley or McLean.
I thought they are traditionally in the 4th-6th spot range and the only Arlington school in the top ten most years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:H-B Woodlawn beats Langley and McLean?
Yes. That's been the case for years.
It also has about 1/6 of the number of students as Langley or McLean.
Anonymous wrote:H-B Woodlawn beats Langley and McLean?