Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The article notes a student from the New School as well, I’m more impressed with that since the schools is so small.
It’s private and costs a fortune of course. If my kid were hot housed as a toddler, in a private school with all the resources, private lessons galore, I’m sure he could also win the competitions. But alas.
This is like 40 kids in the entire country.
Who had access to resources 99% of 12th grades don’t.
Exactly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The article notes a student from the New School as well, I’m more impressed with that since the schools is so small.
It’s private and costs a fortune of course. If my kid were hot housed as a toddler, in a private school with all the resources, private lessons galore, I’m sure he could also win the competitions. But alas.
This is like 40 kids in the entire country.
Who had access to resources 99% of 12th grades don’t.
That’s an amazing accomplishment! No one should be “equitying” this. Most kids, no matter how privileged, do not have the smarts and commitment to do this. But it’s no reflection on McLean HS, just on this kid.
I dunno. The Regeneron winner from McLean was also on the school’s “It’s Academic” team that won the DC region competition last year. Seems like he was getting good support and around talented peers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The article notes a student from the New School as well, I’m more impressed with that since the schools is so small.
It’s private and costs a fortune of course. If my kid were hot housed as a toddler, in a private school with all the resources, private lessons galore, I’m sure he could also win the competitions. But alas.
This is like 40 kids in the entire country.
Anonymous wrote:Eh. I am kind of in the middle on it. DH is an electrical engineer and I am a patent attorney with a degree in Mech E. My son has certainly not done as well as this McLean HS student, but he's always made a strong showing in terms of science fairs and engineering competitions. He's smart, and fairly motivated, but there is no way he would have accomplished what he did if he didn't have parents in science/technical fields to help him get on the right track in the beginning. It's a particular skill and approach that unfortunately, most schools don't do well enough.
What is it that you think McLean is doing that other schools aren't to support promising young scientists?
The point is not what McLean is doing or not doing. Lots of good schools, including TJ and Stuyvesant, do not have Regeneron Finalists.
Anonymous wrote:That’s an amazing accomplishment! No one should be “equitying” this. Most kids, no matter how privileged, do not have the smarts and commitment to do this. But it’s no reflection on McLean HS, just on this kid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The article notes a student from the New School as well, I’m more impressed with that since the schools is so small.
It’s private and costs a fortune of course. If my kid were hot housed as a toddler, in a private school with all the resources, private lessons galore, I’m sure he could also win the competitions. But alas.
Anonymous wrote:The article notes a student from the New School as well, I’m more impressed with that since the schools is so small.
Anonymous wrote:The article notes a student from the New School as well, I’m more impressed with that since the schools is so small.
Anonymous wrote:^Precisely. The heartburn with these posts is that the OP's intent is usually to boost their school in an odd display of tribalism for their pyramid. This student has clearly excelled but the community of McLean doesn't deserve to take ownership for his accomplishments, which is what is typically implied.
Anonymous wrote:That’s an amazing accomplishment! No one should be “equitying” this. Most kids, no matter how privileged, do not have the smarts and commitment to do this. But it’s no reflection on McLean HS, just on this kid.