Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Applied/accepted for the 4 Arlington high schools
https://www.arlingtonmagazine.com/college-admissions-a-snapshot-2/
Ouch!!!
This is awful!
Really? Why do you say that? Looks pretty consistent with national averages for elites. Are you experienced with that? It would be normal to think that if you were not.
Which elites?
The top DC privates? No
The top MCPS? No, just check out Whitman list
The top FCPS? No
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Applied/accepted for the 4 Arlington high schools
https://www.arlingtonmagazine.com/college-admissions-a-snapshot-2/
Ouch!!!
This is awful!
Really? Why do you say that? Looks pretty consistent with national averages for elites. Are you experienced with that? It would be normal to think that if you were not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Applied/accepted for the 4 Arlington high schools
https://www.arlingtonmagazine.com/college-admissions-a-snapshot-2/
Ouch!!!
This is awful!
Really? Why do you say that? Looks pretty consistent with national averages for elites. Are you experienced with that? It would be normal to think that if you were not.
I had same reaction -- percentages generally seem to be in range of admission rates national averages. And likely better than public school averages?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Applied/accepted for the 4 Arlington high schools
https://www.arlingtonmagazine.com/college-admissions-a-snapshot-2/
Ouch!!!
This is awful!
Really? Why do you say that? Looks pretty consistent with national averages for elites. Are you experienced with that? It would be normal to think that if you were not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Applied/accepted for the 4 Arlington high schools
https://www.arlingtonmagazine.com/college-admissions-a-snapshot-2/
Ouch!!!
This is awful!
Really? Why do you say that? Looks pretty consistent with national averages for elites. Are you experienced with that? It would be normal to think that if you were not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You folks realize that the denominators are accurate (naviance knows all the applications) but the numerators are only accurate if the kid came back and reported their results? My kid is represented at seven universities as an applicant, but not once as an acceptance.
He was accepted at many. He never went back to fill in the info.
I know at our school (MCPS) they did a good job of chasing down data because that’s what made naviance useful. And from what I saw the admission rates on the scatterplots were calculated for the data points where there were reported outcomes. I assume that’s what is being reported as well. I know in my DCs year that’s the data that was reported for our HS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Applied/accepted for the 4 Arlington high schools
https://www.arlingtonmagazine.com/college-admissions-a-snapshot-2/
Ouch!!!
This is awful!
Anonymous wrote:Applied/accepted for the 4 Arlington high schools
https://www.arlingtonmagazine.com/college-admissions-a-snapshot-2/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel that with APS, because so many pushy parents say the schools are good, people believe it to be so. But these parents — who are generally nerds with attitude and money — would never admit that something they chose is less than great.
The schools are generally good. However, something that hurts APS in the upper grades is that all its elementary schools have different approaches--ATS, science focus, montessori. This is what the parents want. But it is short-sighted.
When kids hit the secondary grades, APS MS teachers have to deal with kids from many different style schools, and are forced to teach to the middle or bottom to make sure all the students have the same information. Meanwhile, other VA counties, who have been teaching more uniformly from the beginning, can turn things up to get kids ready for advanced maths, APs and SATs.
APS will never be able to compete with this under its current system.
You make an excellent point.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone move to Arlington thinking it's the ticket to an Ivy? That's just ridiculous. No public school is. I'm happy to live here for a short commute, good public services, a house I like, and a good education for my kids. DS wants to go to VA Tech and that's just fine with me, I'm sure he'll be well prepared and do well in life.
The reality is that if you are an Ivy grad from the days when it was relatively easy to get in, your kids are going to have a much, much harder time getting in unless you are donating a building. Doesn't matter where you live, it's just the numbers. It's a totally different game than 20-30 years ago.
+1. DH and I are both Ivy grads. If that was our only goal for our kid, we'd have them in private school. We are in public school because they are more in line with our values, and because we know that when we to go work every day, some of our colleagues are also Ivy grads, but even more of them graduated from good non-Ivy schools. We are all doing the same kind of work, are held in the same esteem, and are compensated under the same system that does not depend on our school credentials. Ivies aren't the end-all and be-all, and we are more concerned with our children's total well-being than with just the seal on their college diploma.
Anonymous wrote:You folks realize that the denominators are accurate (naviance knows all the applications) but the numerators are only accurate if the kid came back and reported their results? My kid is represented at seven universities as an applicant, but not once as an acceptance.
He was accepted at many. He never went back to fill in the info.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You folks realize that the denominators are accurate (naviance knows all the applications) but the numerators are only accurate if the kid came back and reported their results? My kid is represented at seven universities as an applicant, but not once as an acceptance.
He was accepted at many. He never went back to fill in the info.
No, they’re sticking their heads in the sand on this point because it destroys their narrative.