Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is schoolwork easy? Guess the smarter kids will get all A's then and get into better schools. Seems like a win-win if you ask me. Also, to the Maryland comment, we love that JR starts 9am. My kids love to sleep in. I believe the bell is at 7:30 am in Maryland Montgomery County schools. You couldn't pay me to move there!javascript:void(0);
Ugh. Is this what DCPS thinks?! Do you not understand that colleges pay attention to HS’s overall profile? Colleges hate schools that are too easy and where everybody gets As, so they can’t actually distinguish performance.
A school with J-R’s profile makes standardized test scores matter more. It’s good for some kids and bad for others, in terms of what it does to their admissions prospects.
A small group might benefit in admissions. No one benefits in actual learning or college preparation.
Yet another way that DCPS sacrifices education and the achievement of the hardest working students for the sake of optics.
+1 million. And the kids are not prepare and struggle in college. The end goal is not getting easy A’s but being academically prepared for a much higher level playing field.
And the more kids are admitted to colleges where they end up struggling, the fewer admits from the same high school those colleges will take the next years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is schoolwork easy? Guess the smarter kids will get all A's then and get into better schools. Seems like a win-win if you ask me. Also, to the Maryland comment, we love that JR starts 9am. My kids love to sleep in. I believe the bell is at 7:30 am in Maryland Montgomery County schools. You couldn't pay me to move there!javascript:void(0);
Ugh. Is this what DCPS thinks?! Do you not understand that colleges pay attention to HS’s overall profile? Colleges hate schools that are too easy and where everybody gets As, so they can’t actually distinguish performance.
A school with J-R’s profile makes standardized test scores matter more. It’s good for some kids and bad for others, in terms of what it does to their admissions prospects.
A small group might benefit in admissions. No one benefits in actual learning or college preparation.
Yet another way that DCPS sacrifices education and the achievement of the hardest working students for the sake of optics.
+1 million. And the kids are not prepare and struggle in college. The end goal is not getting easy A’s but being academically prepared for a much higher level playing field.
Anonymous wrote:Why is schoolwork easy? Guess the smarter kids will get all A's then and get into better schools. Seems like a win-win if you ask me. Also, to the Maryland comment, we love that JR starts 9am. My kids love to sleep in. I believe the bell is at 7:30 am in Maryland Montgomery County schools. You couldn't pay me to move there!javascript:void(0);
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is schoolwork easy? Guess the smarter kids will get all A's then and get into better schools. Seems like a win-win if you ask me. Also, to the Maryland comment, we love that JR starts 9am. My kids love to sleep in. I believe the bell is at 7:30 am in Maryland Montgomery County schools. You couldn't pay me to move there!javascript:void(0);
Ugh. Is this what DCPS thinks?! Do you not understand that colleges pay attention to HS’s overall profile? Colleges hate schools that are too easy and where everybody gets As, so they can’t actually distinguish performance.
A school with J-R’s profile makes standardized test scores matter more. It’s good for some kids and bad for others, in terms of what it does to their admissions prospects.
A small group might benefit in admissions. No one benefits in actual learning or college preparation.
Yet another way that DCPS sacrifices education and the achievement of the hardest working students for the sake of optics.
+1 million. And the kids are not prepare and struggle in college. The end goal is not getting easy A’s but being academically prepared for a much higher level playing field.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Could you be a little more specific? J-R has over 2000 kids. Mine is happy, athlete, B student, 1 AP, doing just fine. I’m sure that would make many on this list head for MD. And many others have different kids with different interests. So maybe let us know what you are looking for and we can offer more info.
Not OP, but I have a B student with the option for JR. I’m worried about this kid falling into the gap between the high-fliers and the kids who barely graduate. I would love to know how JR works for kids in that middle group, who aren’t much talked about on here. Do they actually master algebra and the five paragraph essay? Do they need to have a certain personality to thrive? Does anyone at JR encourage them to join a team, or to do any extracurriculars, or do you have to be a self-starter? And same question for everything, really: will anyone at JR help my kid pick appropriate electives, or notice if their grades slip into C territory? I’ve been thinking that even with all the unknowns, MacArthur might be better purely on size.
I have the same question for my B- student. He has some mild LD and I am curious how these kids do as well. I always here smart kids do so well. What about the others? Also do they have remedial classes? Or just regular classes and honors or aps?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is schoolwork easy? Guess the smarter kids will get all A's then and get into better schools. Seems like a win-win if you ask me. Also, to the Maryland comment, we love that JR starts 9am. My kids love to sleep in. I believe the bell is at 7:30 am in Maryland Montgomery County schools. You couldn't pay me to move there!javascript:void(0);
No, opposite is true. When anyone that does anything gets As then it's very hard on admissions. Friend's kids who are seniors are finding this to be the case.
Also, people forget that once you get in to these "better schools", kids need to be able to do well. If they are not being educated well in high school, it will be a struggle. It's easier for the UMD grad with a 4.0 gpa to get that first job than a Harvard grad with 2.5.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is schoolwork easy? Guess the smarter kids will get all A's then and get into better schools. Seems like a win-win if you ask me. Also, to the Maryland comment, we love that JR starts 9am. My kids love to sleep in. I believe the bell is at 7:30 am in Maryland Montgomery County schools. You couldn't pay me to move there!javascript:void(0);
No, opposite is true. When anyone that does anything gets As then it's very hard on admissions. Friend's kids who are seniors are finding this to be the case.
Also, people forget that once you get in to these "better schools", kids need to be able to do well. If they are not being educated well in high school, it will be a struggle. It's easier for the UMD grad with a 4.0 gpa to get that first job than a Harvard grad with 2.5.
No, it's not. The Harvard grad wins every time. She me something that says something different. Signed undistinguished but very marketable Harvard Law grad
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is schoolwork easy? Guess the smarter kids will get all A's then and get into better schools. Seems like a win-win if you ask me. Also, to the Maryland comment, we love that JR starts 9am. My kids love to sleep in. I believe the bell is at 7:30 am in Maryland Montgomery County schools. You couldn't pay me to move there!javascript:void(0);
No, opposite is true. When anyone that does anything gets As then it's very hard on admissions. Friend's kids who are seniors are finding this to be the case.
Also, people forget that once you get in to these "better schools", kids need to be able to do well. If they are not being educated well in high school, it will be a struggle. It's easier for the UMD grad with a 4.0 gpa to get that first job than a Harvard grad with 2.5.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FWIW Frederick is great. We'd love if some DC families would follow and are convincing our friends. Covid has hit schools hard. To be fair they were doing well pre-covid in many instances but this is what is happening around the country. Smaller schools are better equipt to manage all the social issues Covid has brought coupled with an overcrowded school system.
Fredneck? No thanks.
Exactly... Some serious racial issues ..I'll pass
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is schoolwork easy? Guess the smarter kids will get all A's then and get into better schools. Seems like a win-win if you ask me. Also, to the Maryland comment, we love that JR starts 9am. My kids love to sleep in. I believe the bell is at 7:30 am in Maryland Montgomery County schools. You couldn't pay me to move there!javascript:void(0);
No, opposite is true. When anyone that does anything gets As then it's very hard on admissions. Friend's kids who are seniors are finding this to be the case.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Could you be a little more specific? J-R has over 2000 kids. Mine is happy, athlete, B student, 1 AP, doing just fine. I’m sure that would make many on this list head for MD. And many others have different kids with different interests. So maybe let us know what you are looking for and we can offer more info.
Not OP, but I have a B student with the option for JR. I’m worried about this kid falling into the gap between the high-fliers and the kids who barely graduate. I would love to know how JR works for kids in that middle group, who aren’t much talked about on here. Do they actually master algebra and the five paragraph essay? Do they need to have a certain personality to thrive? Does anyone at JR encourage them to join a team, or to do any extracurriculars, or do you have to be a self-starter? And same question for everything, really: will anyone at JR help my kid pick appropriate electives, or notice if their grades slip into C territory? I’ve been thinking that even with all the unknowns, MacArthur might be better purely on size.
Anonymous wrote:Could you be a little more specific? J-R has over 2000 kids. Mine is happy, athlete, B student, 1 AP, doing just fine. I’m sure that would make many on this list head for MD. And many others have different kids with different interests. So maybe let us know what you are looking for and we can offer more info.
Anonymous wrote:FWIW Frederick is great. We'd love if some DC families would follow and are convincing our friends. Covid has hit schools hard. To be fair they were doing well pre-covid in many instances but this is what is happening around the country. Smaller schools are better equipt to manage all the social issues Covid has brought coupled with an overcrowded school system.