Anonymous wrote:can someone post the list?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wilson had one. Walls had one. Latin had one. Tough year for everyone
DC has the highest cutoff score of any state (tied with Massachusetts). The NMS is based on where kids go to school, not where they live, and cutoff scores are based on a certain percentage. DC has a lot of private schools that serve the whole region, and those schools dominate the semifinalists. So it's tougher for kids who live in DC to qualify than it would be otherwise.
Actually, I seem to recall hearing that DC is automatically set to be whatever the highest qualifying score is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wilson had one. Walls had one. Latin had one. Tough year for everyone
DC has the highest cutoff score of any state (tied with Massachusetts). The NMS is based on where kids go to school, not where they live, and cutoff scores are based on a certain percentage. DC has a lot of private schools that serve the whole region, and those schools dominate the semifinalists. So it's tougher for kids who live in DC to qualify than it would be otherwise.
Anonymous wrote:Wilson had one. Walls had one. Latin had one. Tough year for everyone
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No need to add stress by naming kids who don't make it. It's not like the Oscars.
Do you mean by naming semifinalists? They have been announced everywhere except in DC. If my child received the honor, I would like for him to be recognized - he has worked amazingly hard as a student and is quite modest but it would be nice for someone to appreciate it, just like for athletes and other kinds of honors. Is it a policy decision not to announce for DC?
Semifinalists are based entirely on performance on one standardized test, the PSAT, so it's hardly the culmination of a career of hard work as a student. It's also a test that is highly teachable and gamable. It shows little about the quality of the education but rather what schools focus on test prep.
Signed, a NMS semifinalist.
Anonymous wrote:The paper version of the Northwest Courier has the list. 39 students from DC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No need to add stress by naming kids who don't make it. It's not like the Oscars.
Do you mean by naming semifinalists? They have been announced everywhere except in DC. If my child received the honor, I would like for him to be recognized - he has worked amazingly hard as a student and is quite modest but it would be nice for someone to appreciate it, just like for athletes and other kinds of honors. Is it a policy decision not to announce for DC?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No need to add stress by naming kids who don't make it. It's not like the Oscars.
Do you mean by naming semifinalists? They have been announced everywhere except in DC. If my child received the honor, I would like for him to be recognized - he has worked amazingly hard as a student and is quite modest but it would be nice for someone to appreciate it, just like for athletes and other kinds of honors. Is it a policy decision not to announce for DC?
Anonymous wrote:No need to add stress by naming kids who don't make it. It's not like the Oscars.