Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Poor Jackson Reed.
Remember last year was a total disaster for testing on PSAT day there. Well - here are the results
Anonymous wrote:Poor Jackson Reed.
Anonymous wrote:Is this one student a typical result for GDS?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:St Albans trounces everyone by a mile.
5/71.
Of course STA has the highest NMSF/senior ratio by a mile. It’s a boys school.
NMSFs are disproportionately boys, and that’s especially true in DC, where the cut score for NMSF is sky high: roughly 2/3 of the DC winners this year (and last year, when the cut score was just as high) are boys.
If you add the NCS and STA numbers together, you get 9/141, which is still the best in town but much more in line with the ratios at the gender-balanced Sidwell and the disproportionately-female Walls.
“If you add the NCS and STA numbers together, you get 9/141, which is still the best in town…”
No, that’s not better than Sidwell’s 8/125.
Correct, they’re essentially tied. (And LOL at me making an arithmetic error in this context!)
NCS only has 2…so that’s 7/141…which is worse than 8/125.
Why are you combing STA and NCS? They're completely different schools with completely different curriculums--they just share land on the Cathedral Close.
I don't understand. The schools have entirely different curriculums.
Nonsense. NCS and STA don’t “just share land on the Cathedral Close.” They are brother/sister schools with a long history.
NCS and STA also have a formal coordinate program. “This allows students to take advantage of each school's outstanding teachers, state-of-the-art facilities, and diversity and depth of programs. And it significantly expands the academic and extracurricular options available to each young woman and man on the Close.”
Further, “coordinate opportunities increase when NCS [and St. Albans] students enter the Upper School. Nearly all art activities and classes are coordinate. English classes for grades 11 and 12 are coed, as are many elective classes.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:St Albans trounces everyone by a mile.
5/71.
Of course STA has the highest NMSF/senior ratio by a mile. It’s a boys school.
NMSFs are disproportionately boys, and that’s especially true in DC, where the cut score for NMSF is sky high: roughly 2/3 of the DC winners this year (and last year, when the cut score was just as high) are boys.
If you add the NCS and STA numbers together, you get 9/141, which is still the best in town but much more in line with the ratios at the gender-balanced Sidwell and the disproportionately-female Walls.
“If you add the NCS and STA numbers together, you get 9/141, which is still the best in town…”
No, that’s not better than Sidwell’s 8/125.
Correct, they’re essentially tied. (And LOL at me making an arithmetic error in this context!)
NCS only has 2…so that’s 7/141…which is worse than 8/125.
Why are you combing STA and NCS? They're completely different schools with completely different curriculums--they just share land on the Cathedral Close.
I don't understand. The schools have entirely different curriculums.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:St Albans trounces everyone by a mile.
5/71.
Of course STA has the highest NMSF/senior ratio by a mile. It’s a boys school.
NMSFs are disproportionately boys, and that’s especially true in DC, where the cut score for NMSF is sky high: roughly 2/3 of the DC winners this year (and last year, when the cut score was just as high) are boys.
If you add the NCS and STA numbers together, you get 9/141, which is still the best in town but much more in line with the ratios at the gender-balanced Sidwell and the disproportionately-female Walls.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:St Albans trounces everyone by a mile.
5/71.
Of course STA has the highest NMSF/senior ratio by a mile. It’s a boys school.
NMSFs are disproportionately boys, and that’s especially true in DC, where the cut score for NMSF is sky high: roughly 2/3 of the DC winners this year (and last year, when the cut score was just as high) are boys.
If you add the NCS and STA numbers together, you get 9/141, which is still the best in town but much more in line with the ratios at the gender-balanced Sidwell and the disproportionately-female Walls.
“If you add the NCS and STA numbers together, you get 9/141, which is still the best in town…”
No, that’s not better than Sidwell’s 8/125.
Correct, they’re essentially tied. (And LOL at me making an arithmetic error in this context!)
NCS only has 2…so that’s 7/141…which is worse than 8/125.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:St Albans trounces everyone by a mile.
5/71.
Of course STA has the highest NMSF/senior ratio by a mile. It’s a boys school.
NMSFs are disproportionately boys, and that’s especially true in DC, where the cut score for NMSF is sky high: roughly 2/3 of the DC winners this year (and last year, when the cut score was just as high) are boys.
If you add the NCS and STA numbers together, you get 9/141, which is still the best in town but much more in line with the ratios at the gender-balanced Sidwell and the disproportionately-female Walls.
“If you add the NCS and STA numbers together, you get 9/141, which is still the best in town…”
No, that’s not better than Sidwell’s 8/125.
Correct, they’re essentially tied. (And LOL at me making an arithmetic error in this context!)
NCS only has 2…so that’s 7/141…which is worse than 8/125.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:St Albans trounces everyone by a mile.
5/71.
Of course STA has the highest NMSF/senior ratio by a mile. It’s a boys school.
NMSFs are disproportionately boys, and that’s especially true in DC, where the cut score for NMSF is sky high: roughly 2/3 of the DC winners this year (and last year, when the cut score was just as high) are boys.
If you add the NCS and STA numbers together, you get 9/141, which is still the best in town but much more in line with the ratios at the gender-balanced Sidwell and the disproportionately-female Walls.
“If you add the NCS and STA numbers together, you get 9/141, which is still the best in town…”
No, that’s not better than Sidwell’s 8/125.
Correct, they’re essentially tied. (And LOL at me making an arithmetic error in this context!)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:St Albans trounces everyone by a mile.
5/71.
Of course STA has the highest NMSF/senior ratio by a mile. It’s a boys school.
NMSFs are disproportionately boys, and that’s especially true in DC, where the cut score for NMSF is sky high: roughly 2/3 of the DC winners this year (and last year, when the cut score was just as high) are boys.
If you add the NCS and STA numbers together, you get 9/141, which is still the best in town but much more in line with the ratios at the gender-balanced Sidwell and the disproportionately-female Walls.
“If you add the NCS and STA numbers together, you get 9/141, which is still the best in town…”
No, that’s not better than Sidwell’s 8/125.
Correct, they’re essentially tied. (And LOL at me making an arithmetic error in this context!)
Anonymous wrote:why is Walls disproportionately female?
My STA boy did not get into Walls from a DCPS middle school (within the past two years). He was accepted to STA, Sidwell, the Scholars program at St. Johns, Gonzaga, etc. I can think of other boys like this--one is now at Sidwell, one at GDS. They had straight high As in DCPS middle school and were total academic kids (algebra 2 in middle school, etc). None got into Walls.
I don't think my kid would have chosen Walls and he's getting an outstanding education at STA but it's weird that Walls would be turning down highly accomplished boys and yet maintaining a gender imbalance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:St Albans trounces everyone by a mile.
5/71.
Of course STA has the highest NMSF/senior ratio by a mile. It’s a boys school.
NMSFs are disproportionately boys, and that’s especially true in DC, where the cut score for NMSF is sky high: roughly 2/3 of the DC winners this year (and last year, when the cut score was just as high) are boys.
If you add the NCS and STA numbers together, you get 9/141, which is still the best in town but much more in line with the ratios at the gender-balanced Sidwell and the disproportionately-female Walls.
“If you add the NCS and STA numbers together, you get 9/141, which is still the best in town…”
No, that’s not better than Sidwell’s 8/125.
Correct, they’re essentially tied. (And LOL at me making an arithmetic error in this context!)