Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes of course, because what if he doesn’t get into blair?
My understanding is that Blair is harder to get into than Wheaton, so I am wondering if there is a chance he would get into Blair SMACS and not Wheaton Engineering?
Obviously I know he could get into neither.
— OP
+ 1 million
Wheaton engineering is much much easier to get in, kids who did not get in Blair go there
New poster here, and I’m wondering if this will actually be true this year. My DC is currently in the TPMS math/science magnet, and says that everyone they know is interested in both Blair AND Wheaton. With Wheaton having only 30 spaces, I think it will be very competitive in the first round. (Though I hope I’m wrong, since my DC really wants to go there!)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes the selection is independent and there are fewer spots at Wheaton
But also fewer candidates? Because Wheaton is just the DCC? Maybe I'm wrong, I thought I'd heard that Blair was the more selective program.
All students attending a DCC middle school can apply to Wheaton. This includes out-of-area students attending the MSMC (Parkland, Loiederman, Argyle). Wheaton also has many students apply but not get in. The two programs are different and appeal to different highly qualified students. Choosing one to apply to over the other based on popularity is a poor way to decide.
Yes, so many non dcc kids at TPMS/Eastern will also apply.
They only take 30 students for each program.
30 students for what programs?
30 for Biomed
30 for Engineering
(Wheaton has to* distinct magnets -- they have some math, science overlap and then have program specific classes)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How does this work? Do you have to rank choices? If my kid applies for Blair SMAC, and CAP and Wheaton engineering, is he considered for each program individually? Or will he only get accepted to one? Basically is there a downside to applying to everything you might consider?
Selection is independent but there’s only one application so it can be difficult to tailor to both stem and humanities. Kids get into multiple programs all the time though so apply to any that dc would consider…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes the selection is independent and there are fewer spots at Wheaton
But also fewer candidates? Because Wheaton is just the DCC? Maybe I'm wrong, I thought I'd heard that Blair was the more selective program.
All students attending a DCC middle school can apply to Wheaton. This includes out-of-area students attending the MSMC (Parkland, Loiederman, Argyle). Wheaton also has many students apply but not get in. The two programs are different and appeal to different highly qualified students. Choosing one to apply to over the other based on popularity is a poor way to decide.
Yes, so many non dcc kids at TPMS/Eastern will also apply.
They only take 30 students for each program.
30 students for what programs?
Anonymous wrote:How does this work? Do you have to rank choices? If my kid applies for Blair SMAC, and CAP and Wheaton engineering, is he considered for each program individually? Or will he only get accepted to one? Basically is there a downside to applying to everything you might consider?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes the selection is independent and there are fewer spots at Wheaton
But also fewer candidates? Because Wheaton is just the DCC? Maybe I'm wrong, I thought I'd heard that Blair was the more selective program.
All students attending a DCC middle school can apply to Wheaton. This includes out-of-area students attending the MSMC (Parkland, Loiederman, Argyle). Wheaton also has many students apply but not get in. The two programs are different and appeal to different highly qualified students. Choosing one to apply to over the other based on popularity is a poor way to decide.
Yes, so many non dcc kids at TPMS/Eastern will also apply.
They only take 30 students for each program.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes of course, because what if he doesn’t get into blair?
My understanding is that Blair is harder to get into than Wheaton, so I am wondering if there is a chance he would get into Blair SMACS and not Wheaton Engineering?
Obviously I know he could get into neither.
— OP
+ 1 million
Wheaton engineering is much much easier to get in, kids who did not get in Blair go there
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes of course, because what if he doesn’t get into blair?
My understanding is that Blair is harder to get into than Wheaton, so I am wondering if there is a chance he would get into Blair SMACS and not Wheaton Engineering?
Obviously I know he could get into neither.
— OP
+ 1 million
Wheaton engineering is much much easier to get in, kids who did not get in Blair go there
Anonymous wrote:If your student is really motivated by the engineering classes, I’d put Wheaton as home school choice. As a previous poster indicated, Wheaton Academy students can take all the same engineering (and biomed) classes as those within the magnet cohort. I found at Blair the magnet classes are nominally open to those outside the magnet, but historically that rarely occurred. Many ambitious non-magnet students at Wheaton are taking AP Physics C and even Multivariable calc, Organic chem, and other high-level classes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes of course, because what if he doesn’t get into blair?
My understanding is that Blair is harder to get into than Wheaton, so I am wondering if there is a chance he would get into Blair SMACS and not Wheaton Engineering?
Obviously I know he could get into neither.
— OP
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does it make sense to apply to Blair? I guess I don’t know how admissions is done.
Are you in the DCC? Assuming so, which school is your home school? Son should apply to both magnet programs and put Wheaton as first choice for DCC lottery. If your home school is Wheaton he could put Blair first to have an option, but very unlikely to get in to Blair that way.
Why put nay school other than home as a first choice? How does that impact magnet selection?