Anonymous wrote:
You clearly know nothing about the top private school world. NCS is ranked nationally in the top 20 of all us private schools
, and top 10 if you take out NYC privates. Your moco or fairfax county publics just can't compare. Please.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh boy, here comes another round of why TJ is superior.
Wrong. I'm the one who laughed at the 3.5, and I am NOT affiliated with TJ. NCS is a great school. My point is if the OP's daughter can only muster a 3.5, she would NOT have gotten a 4.5 in public school. Please.
You clearly know nothing about the top private school world. NCS is ranked nationally in the top 20 of all us private schools
, and top 10 if you take out NYC privates. Your moco or fairfax county publics just can't compare. Please.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh boy, here comes another round of why TJ is superior.
Wrong. I'm the one who laughed at the 3.5, and I am NOT affiliated with TJ. NCS is a great school. My point is if the OP's daughter can only muster a 3.5, she would NOT have gotten a 4.5 in public school. Please.
Anonymous wrote:Oh boy, here comes another round of why TJ is superior.
Anonymous wrote:Is it true some some NCS parents hire private college counselor to help select colleges, courses, extracurriculars, sports, volunteering, and SAT prep as early as 9th grade?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That is an awful GPA anywhere.[/quote
Um, no. Do you know NCS? Her DD would likely have earned a 4.5 at any of the top local public high schools. NCS does not grade infate, nor does it give A's freely.
Um, no. First the basics: in public schools, weights are only given for AP courses, not for honors courses. Now the reasons you're wrong: (a) AP courses can be very, very difficult, not an "easy A" by any stretch, and (b) public schools calculate both weighted and unweighted GPAs, and nobody pays any attention to the weighted GPAs because the colleges only use the unweighted.
Anonymous wrote:3.48 is a B+ average which is great. NCS does not weight grades so the highest possible is an A with a 4.0. Students do not get added GPA boost for taking AP/honors courses.
Anonymous wrote:My DD graduated from a local private school and our view was that the college counselors helped with 1)providing data on what the school's admission history was with a particular college 2) helping with the transcript/recommendation process 3) helping brainstorm essays (but no help in editing them, as we discovered at about 11:30 pm before one midnight deadline) 4) writing a good recommendation.
They were not much help in identifying schools, my DD did that on her own and the ones they suggested she hated. I don't think they did any calling/cajoling in the admissions process, although they may have met with the admissions reps when they were on campus. But those visits were early in the process and most kids had not settled on their application list at that point. It is not clear to me that they were any help in the WL process and my DD was WLed at her two top choices.
I understand at some schools the counselors strongly discourage some kids from applying to some of the top schools if they think they can't get in. Our school did not do that, although they did help to identify reach schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That is an awful GPA anywhere.[/quote
Um, no. Do you know NCS? Her DD would likely have earned a 4.5 at any of the top local public high schools. NCS does not grade infate, nor does it give A's freely.
LOL. Yeah, right.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That is an awful GPA anywhere.[/quote
Um, no. Do you know NCS? Her DD would likely have earned a 4.5 at any of the top local public high schools. NCS does not grade infate, nor does it give A's freely.
Thank you, PP. Absolutely, the truth. NCS is extremely rigorous and given DD's schedule and ECs, we were so proud of her ability to time manage and pursue the things that truly made her happy.