Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Admission by testing is hardly a meritocracy.
TJ is much more of a meritocracy than local privates, whichb largely admit kids based on their families’ wealth and social connections. It’s no surprise that, with the college admissions scandal still fresh, parents at local privates are feeling unusually defensive. That is part of their everyday world being exposed to the general public.
Nah, most people do not do what those idiots did.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Admission by testing is hardly a meritocracy.
TJ is much more of a meritocracy than local privates, whichb largely admit kids based on their families’ wealth and social connections. It’s no surprise that, with the college admissions scandal still fresh, parents at local privates are feeling unusually defensive. That is part of their everyday world being exposed to the general public.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's your evidence that HS admissions at private schools isn't by academic merit?
Just call any of the admission offices at these privates and ask them if a straight A kid with high level math and science with superior writing skill and a 99 percentile in SSAT (this is what they use) is guaranteed an admission and compare what they say with the TJ admission process.
Anonymous wrote:What's up with TJ college acceptances this year? I m curious as they are usually very good...
Anonymous wrote:What's your evidence that HS admissions at private schools isn't by academic merit?
Anonymous wrote:TJ students also spend so much time on homework they don’t build their social skills.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Admission by testing is hardly a meritocracy.
TJ is much more of a meritocracy than local privates, whichb largely admit kids based on their families’ wealth and social connections. It’s no surprise that, with the college admissions scandal still fresh, parents at local privates are feeling unusually defensive. That is part of their everyday world being exposed to the general public.
You would have us believe that the local private schools make admissions decisions in the exact same way all the way from PK to high school. Except that they don't.
Sure, wealth and social connections are much more relevant in PK and K when there's really not much that can be gleaned about a young applicant. But in terms of 9th grade admissions (i.e., apples-to-apples with TJ), it's just as much a "meritocracy" as how you define it. The wealth/connections folks likely got into these private schools well before high school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Admission by testing is hardly a meritocracy.
TJ is much more of a meritocracy than local privates, whichb largely admit kids based on their families’ wealth and social connections. It’s no surprise that, with the college admissions scandal still fresh, parents at local privates are feeling unusually defensive. That is part of their everyday world being exposed to the general public.
Anonymous wrote:Admission by testing is hardly a meritocracy.
Anonymous wrote:Why all the angst towards TJ? Because rich people hate meritocracies.