Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I see this is very troubling to schools like YORKTOWN that have taken huge hits.
They went from a 9 to a 5.
I think the current rankings more accurately reflect the quality of that particular school.
Great school is the standard when evaluating real estate..
You're silly.
You don't think people actually weigh GS ratings when shopping for a house, do you? They do not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I see this is very troubling to schools like YORKTOWN that have taken huge hits.
They went from a 9 to a 5.
I think the current rankings more accurately reflect the quality of that particular school.
Great school is the standard when evaluating real estate..
You're silly.
You don't think people actually weigh GS ratings when shopping for a house, do you? They do not.
Anonymous wrote:I see this is very troubling to schools like YORKTOWN that have taken huge hits.
They went from a 9 to a 5.
I think the current rankings more accurately reflect the quality of that particular school.
Great school is the standard when evaluating real estate..
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do you put into your search?
DP. What do you mean? Look up the various schools you're interested in and then compare their profiles.
How is that different than school profiles? Is there an overall chart where you can easily compare them all together?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do you put into your search?
DP. What do you mean? Look up the various schools you're interested in and then compare their profiles.
How is that different than school profiles? Is there an overall chart where you can easily compare them all together?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These are the actual SOL score reports from the state. Much better than Great Schools, which takes the same info, does some sort of weighting of the data and then comes up with their scores.
You can filter results by gender, race, economically disadvantaged, disabled, English learners. I do wish it gave the inverse for some of those groups, e.g. you can look at economically disadvantaged but not those who are not.
They don't give you the reverse statistics, but all of the data you need to calculate them is there.
You can also just look at the "White" group since they are much less likely to be economically disadvantaged in Arlington.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do you put into your search?
DP. What do you mean? Look up the various schools you're interested in and then compare their profiles.
Anonymous wrote:These are the actual SOL score reports from the state. Much better than Great Schools, which takes the same info, does some sort of weighting of the data and then comes up with their scores.
You can filter results by gender, race, economically disadvantaged, disabled, English learners. I do wish it gave the inverse for some of those groups, e.g. you can look at economically disadvantaged but not those who are not.
Anonymous wrote:What do you put into your search?