Anonymous wrote:This year for DC:
SWW 6
Sidwell 5
Georgetown Day 4
Gonzaga 3
St. Albans 3
National Cathedral 2
St. Anselm’s 2
Basis 1
Maret 1
WIS 1
Whittle 1
Wilson (J-R) 1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To TJ...please leave some scholarships for the rest of us.
You TJ parents are obnoxious and PITA
This is DC schools forum not VA
The kid is obviously not at TJ. Reading comprehension?
Of course they are not at TJ because I live in DC and this is the DC schools forum.
Idiot.
Are you semi-illiterate? No one is talking about you or your kid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To TJ...please leave some scholarships for the rest of us.
You TJ parents are obnoxious and PITA
This is DC schools forum not VA
The kid is obviously not at TJ. Reading comprehension?
Of course they are not at TJ because I live in DC and this is the DC schools forum.
Idiot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just remember that nearly all the NMSF slots in DC get gobbled up by private school kids.
The awards are allocated by "state" and are based on where a kid attends school, not their home. Because of that, DC has the highest cutoff score in the country just about every year and so any public school kid that makes it on the list is really punching above their weight.
All of this. Also, it's all relative to the state.
Sort of. DC's cut off is usually the highest along with that of 3 or 4 states, often NY, NJ, MA. This year, DC only has 2 Nat Merit scholarship semifinalists, both from Wilson. There have been years when DC had 3 or 4 from Walls alone, with others at BASIS and Latin. Depressing. Meanwhile, Sidwell Friends has 16.
NY is hardly ever in the highest states. It is usually NJ, MA, MD. For a very long time it was always almost MD hence the reason some people thought DC was lumped with MD.
No. DC has the highest cut off year after year, often
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just remember that nearly all the NMSF slots in DC get gobbled up by private school kids.
The awards are allocated by "state" and are based on where a kid attends school, not their home. Because of that, DC has the highest cutoff score in the country just about every year and so any public school kid that makes it on the list is really punching above their weight.
All of this. Also, it's all relative to the state.
Sort of. DC's cut off is usually the highest along with that of 3 or 4 states, often NY, NJ, MA. This year, DC only has 2 Nat Merit scholarship semifinalists, both from Wilson. There have been years when DC had 3 or 4 from Walls alone, with others at BASIS and Latin. Depressing. Meanwhile, Sidwell Friends has 16.
NY is hardly ever in the highest states. It is usually NJ, MA, MD. For a very long time it was always almost MD hence the reason some people thought DC was lumped with MD.
Anonymous wrote:Just remember that nearly all the NMSF slots in DC get gobbled up by private school kids.
The awards are allocated by "state" and are based on where a kid attends school, not their home. Because of that, DC has the highest cutoff score in the country just about every year and so any public school kid that makes it on the list is really punching above their weight.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just remember that nearly all the NMSF slots in DC get gobbled up by private school kids.
The awards are allocated by "state" and are based on where a kid attends school, not their home. Because of that, DC has the highest cutoff score in the country just about every year and so any public school kid that makes it on the list is really punching above their weight.
All of this. Also, it's all relative to the state.
Sort of. DC's cut off is usually the highest along with that of 3 or 4 states, often NY, NJ, MA. This year, DC only has 2 Nat Merit scholarship semifinalists, both from Wilson. There have been years when DC had 3 or 4 from Walls alone, with others at BASIS and Latin. Depressing. Meanwhile, Sidwell Friends has 16.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just remember that nearly all the NMSF slots in DC get gobbled up by private school kids.
The awards are allocated by "state" and are based on where a kid attends school, not their home. Because of that, DC has the highest cutoff score in the country just about every year and so any public school kid that makes it on the list is really punching above their weight.
All of this. Also, it's all relative to the state.
Sort of. DC's cut off is usually the highest along with that of 3 or 4 states, often NY, NJ, MA. This year, DC only has 2 Nat Merit scholarship semifinalists, both from Wilson. There have been years when DC had 3 or 4 from Walls alone, with others at BASIS and Latin. Depressing. Meanwhile, Sidwell Friends has 16.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just remember that nearly all the NMSF slots in DC get gobbled up by private school kids.
The awards are allocated by "state" and are based on where a kid attends school, not their home. Because of that, DC has the highest cutoff score in the country just about every year and so any public school kid that makes it on the list is really punching above their weight.
I thought there was some suggestion that the NMSC just follows a policy of setting the cutoff for DC the same as the highest for any state (this year, New Jersey, at 223). If so, it would just happen that the vast majority of kids in DC meeting the cutoff attend private schools.
Anonymous wrote:TJ's dominance in VA is incredible. https://www.fcps.edu/news/two-hundred-thirty-seven-fcps-students-are-2023-national-merit-semifinalists
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just remember that nearly all the NMSF slots in DC get gobbled up by private school kids.
The awards are allocated by "state" and are based on where a kid attends school, not their home. Because of that, DC has the highest cutoff score in the country just about every year and so any public school kid that makes it on the list is really punching above their weight.
All of this. Also, it's all relative to the state.
Sort of. DC's cut off is usually the highest along with that of 3 or 4 states, often NY, NJ, MA. This year, DC only has 2 Nat Merit scholarship semifinalists, both from Wilson. There have been years when DC had 3 or 4 from Walls alone, with others at BASIS and Latin. Depressing. Meanwhile, Sidwell Friends has 16.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just remember that nearly all the NMSF slots in DC get gobbled up by private school kids.
The awards are allocated by "state" and are based on where a kid attends school, not their home. Because of that, DC has the highest cutoff score in the country just about every year and so any public school kid that makes it on the list is really punching above their weight.
All of this. Also, it's all relative to the state.