Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are all HSs pushed down 1 rating because they need to make TJ a 10 and need to differentiate between TJ and everything else? It's more like a state ranking/tiers right, instead of true rating. Which is why you can't compare across states.
What? I don't understand what you are meaning about rankings?
TJ is the only 10 in FFX APS etc, because it is much further ahead of the pack. Your school can't be a 10 in comparison.
Right. That is what I was trying to say. TJ is a 10, making it impossible for any other school in VA to be a 10 because nothing else compares. And the 9s are the next tier, etc. If TJ disappeared one day, all remaining schools would +1.
So not a true "rating" calculated numerically, but a ranking of 10 tiers across the state.
The unfortunate truth is you could shut the average wealthy kid in a room alone with a textbook and they'd probably still score better than the average ESL/FARMS kid with full classroom instruction.
Perhaps...you, too, would score worse on a test in a different language if you were up against a "wealthy kid" taking it in his native language.
Sounds like that's what pp is saying.
Anonymous wrote:None of the VA schools (aside from TJ) do well with college placement. Maybe TJ is pulling spots from other area HSs?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yorktown's college placement is garbage. I feel so sorry for those kids. They work hard there, but very little payoff when they come out.Anonymous wrote:Wow Yorktown
That depends. If you like UVA, W&M, and JMU, Yorktown is great. If your kid wants to go to a top 10 USNWR school, it's doable, but they will need to earn their way in...there's no boost/cache coming from Yorktown.
Anonymous wrote:Yorktown's college placement is garbage. I feel so sorry for those kids. They work hard there, but very little payoff when they come out.Anonymous wrote:Wow Yorktown
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow Yorktown
Don't worry, Yorktown blows them all away in the latest Challenge Index
https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/local/high-school-challenge-2017/
Yorktown and W-L score high in terms of the average number of AP or IB classes taken by graduating seniors. They don't do as well in terms of the percentage who both take and pass an AP or IB exam - look at the "E&E" ratings published with the Challenge Index.
Yorktown and W-L are the worst of both worlds: Intense, pressure cooker schools but with mediocre outcomes and abysmal college placement. Their graduates head off to mediocre colleges and universities either a) dispirited; or b) with a big chip on their shoulders.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow Yorktown
Don't worry, Yorktown blows them all away in the latest Challenge Index
https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/local/high-school-challenge-2017/
Yorktown and W-L score high in terms of the average number of AP or IB classes taken by graduating seniors. They don't do as well in terms of the percentage who both take and pass an AP or IB exam - look at the "E&E" ratings published with the Challenge Index.
Anonymous wrote:
+1
The unfortunate truth is you could shut the average wealthy kid in a room alone with a textbook and they'd probably still score better than the average ESL/FARMS kid with full classroom instruction.
Perhaps...you, too, would score worse on a test in a different language if you were up against a "wealthy kid" taking it in his native language.
Yorktown's college placement is garbage. I feel so sorry for those kids. They work hard there, but very little payoff when they come out.Anonymous wrote:Wow Yorktown
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fairfax falling to a 6. It used to be a solidly middle class county with pockets of wealthy.
The county has been overrun with poverty. The score reflects that.
Got it the first time.
You can go back now to pondering why no Arlington high school is higher than a 7, and why the APS School Board can't figure out how to build a fourth high school.
FCPS is huge and has a very uneven distribution of income. Where is is good, it is excellent. Where it is bad, it is really bad. And there is not a lot in the middle of the bell curve. We can all say we wish the schools were more even, but geographically that's tough. The Eastern county is killing us. Killing ACPS too. But, I bought a nice SFH in a GS 8-10, ES, MS and HS zone for under 700k. So you can get GS 8 schools without buying a million dollar home. Whereas, you can't get a GS 8 high school in APS, not matter what you spend.
And I'm sure all the parents of kids starting ES are thrilled about APS's overcrowding issues. By the time those kids start HS, the SB is still going to be trying to make the Ed Center work, or have moved on to 2 shift HSs or whatever else.
We've all got our issues. FCPS's is definately demographic. I can't figure out how we keep being ranked up there with Arlington in most educated, most affluent, and be getting poorer. But there you have it.
Fairfax is not getting poorer. Average incomes are not dropping, the overall FARMS percentage is three percentage points lower than in Arlington, and the FARMS percentage in FCPS has gone down for two years in a row. Fairfax also has a much larger "middle" than the other large suburban county with decent schools, Montgomery.
Ok. Well then fairfax county is just sucking because it sucks. Mystery solved.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fairfax falling to a 6. It used to be a solidly middle class county with pockets of wealthy.
The county has been overrun with poverty. The score reflects that.
Got it the first time.
You can go back now to pondering why no Arlington high school is higher than a 7, and why the APS School Board can't figure out how to build a fourth high school.
FCPS is huge and has a very uneven distribution of income. Where is is good, it is excellent. Where it is bad, it is really bad. And there is not a lot in the middle of the bell curve. We can all say we wish the schools were more even, but geographically that's tough. The Eastern county is killing us. Killing ACPS too. But, I bought a nice SFH in a GS 8-10, ES, MS and HS zone for under 700k. So you can get GS 8 schools without buying a million dollar home. Whereas, you can't get a GS 8 high school in APS, not matter what you spend.
And I'm sure all the parents of kids starting ES are thrilled about APS's overcrowding issues. By the time those kids start HS, the SB is still going to be trying to make the Ed Center work, or have moved on to 2 shift HSs or whatever else.
We've all got our issues. FCPS's is definately demographic. I can't figure out how we keep being ranked up there with Arlington in most educated, most affluent, and be getting poorer. But there you have it.
Fairfax is not getting poorer. Average incomes are not dropping, the overall FARMS percentage is three percentage points lower than in Arlington, and the FARMS percentage in FCPS has gone down for two years in a row. Fairfax also has a much larger "middle" than the other large suburban county with decent schools, Montgomery.
The unfortunate truth is you could shut the average wealthy kid in a room alone with a textbook and they'd probably still score better than the average ESL/FARMS kid with full classroom instruction.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fairfax falling to a 6. It used to be a solidly middle class county with pockets of wealthy.
The county has been overrun with poverty. The score reflects that.
Got it the first time.
You can go back now to pondering why no Arlington high school is higher than a 7, and why the APS School Board can't figure out how to build a fourth high school.
FCPS is huge and has a very uneven distribution of income. Where is is good, it is excellent. Where it is bad, it is really bad. And there is not a lot in the middle of the bell curve. We can all say we wish the schools were more even, but geographically that's tough. The Eastern county is killing us. Killing ACPS too. But, I bought a nice SFH in a GS 8-10, ES, MS and HS zone for under 700k. So you can get GS 8 schools without buying a million dollar home. Whereas, you can't get a GS 8 high school in APS, not matter what you spend.
And I'm sure all the parents of kids starting ES are thrilled about APS's overcrowding issues. By the time those kids start HS, the SB is still going to be trying to make the Ed Center work, or have moved on to 2 shift HSs or whatever else.
We've all got our issues. FCPS's is definately demographic. I can't figure out how we keep being ranked up there with Arlington in most educated, most affluent, and be getting poorer. But there you have it.