Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It depends the kind of accelerated program the high school has in place. Our high school is a 3- however, they have an amazing program for accelerated students. They are literally bussed away for half the day to special math and science center (they apply for test into) at no cost. And your child gets to be with like-minded peers for most of the day too which is important. I would not send my child to an underperforming elementary school. But middle and high schools it can sometimes work if 1) your child is advanced 2) they have special programs that would meet those needs
OP again. My local elementary school is a GS 4. Would you say that's good enough, or is that the point where you'd consider private school?
Anonymous wrote:It depends the kind of accelerated program the high school has in place. Our high school is a 3- however, they have an amazing program for accelerated students. They are literally bussed away for half the day to special math and science center (they apply for test into) at no cost. And your child gets to be with like-minded peers for most of the day too which is important. I would not send my child to an underperforming elementary school. But middle and high schools it can sometimes work if 1) your child is advanced 2) they have special programs that would meet those needs
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For 6th grade l went to school in a poorer part of the city. About 1/3 of the parents didn’t speak or read English and bilingual homework was sent home. I was the best at every subject in my class, and at all the sports. It was weird and nobody liked me.
For 7th grade we moved to a middle class area, l was still smart but not the best at everything, and l was good in a few sports. It felt way more normal. I fit in.
So my personal preference was the 2nd school, which probably correlates to the higher rated schools on GS. Not a scientific analysis by any means, but it’s the main reason l live in an expensive shoebox house near highly rated schools.
Yeah, this is me too.
But this is high school. What you are describing is more like a middle school rated 2 versus a middle school rated 6. You experienced a middle class school. High schools rated 8 in this area are nearly all white and upper class and high-pressure.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For 6th grade l went to school in a poorer part of the city. About 1/3 of the parents didn’t speak or read English and bilingual homework was sent home. I was the best at every subject in my class, and at all the sports. It was weird and nobody liked me.
For 7th grade we moved to a middle class area, l was still smart but not the best at everything, and l was good in a few sports. It felt way more normal. I fit in.
So my personal preference was the 2nd school, which probably correlates to the higher rated schools on GS. Not a scientific analysis by any means, but it’s the main reason l live in an expensive shoebox house near highly rated schools.
Yeah, this is me too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The 5 will have URMs and the 8 won't.
This. Its all SES based.
Exactly. We are at a school like this (35% FRM and GS4.) There is still a huge selection of AP classes, DE classes, and Honors classes, and a large chunk of motivated students taking them. College placement among the top half of the class is excellent. But yes there are a lot poor kids at our school, mostly Hispanic. Its not Yale or Jail exactly - more like UVA or Nova.
Anonymous wrote:For 6th grade l went to school in a poorer part of the city. About 1/3 of the parents didn’t speak or read English and bilingual homework was sent home. I was the best at every subject in my class, and at all the sports. It was weird and nobody liked me.
For 7th grade we moved to a middle class area, l was still smart but not the best at everything, and l was good in a few sports. It felt way more normal. I fit in.
So my personal preference was the 2nd school, which probably correlates to the higher rated schools on GS. Not a scientific analysis by any means, but it’s the main reason l live in an expensive shoebox house near highly rated schools.
Anonymous wrote:Our kids go to high school rated a 3. Our whole pyramid is low rated so after all these years I will say that yes, the score corelates with the quality of the education received. Those who say it don't lie to themselves or they pay for outside tutoring. Some of our neighbors have paid the equivalent in tutoring costs to what it would have cost for private school. The biggest cheerleaders of low rated schools are K or 1st grade moms. They just don't know any better yet
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The 5 will have URMs and the 8 won't.
This. Its all SES based.
Anonymous wrote:The 5 will have URMs and the 8 won't.