Anonymous wrote:Between their inflated grades and $$ to do early decision (because they can pay), this system seems so rigged. Anyone else notice this?
This! We need to move to a more Marxist...um...I mean...equitable system.Anonymous wrote:The rich students in MCPS have the same advantages. It’s really a rich vs poor issue not a private vs public issue. But yes, it is really unfair!
Anonymous wrote:Between their inflated grades and $$ to do early decision (because they can pay), this system seems so rigged. Anyone else notice this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Between their inflated grades and $$ to do early decision (because they can pay), this system seems so rigged. Anyone else notice this?
You MUST be joking with your talk about inflated grading when your kid goes to Montgomery County. You can get an A one semester and a D another and get a B for the final grade. MCPS also gives full credit for homework if there is a “good faith effort.” - no points taken off for accuracy or completeness. Also, you can’t get below a 50%. My kid at private doesn’t have any of this nonsense. She earns her grades.
Why are you so upset about this? If a student had a 92 A one semester and a 68 D the second semester, that would average to an 80, which is in fact a B.
Anonymous wrote:I’m not sure the admissions really are better. The private schools are stacked thick with legacy, big donors, semi famous parents, etc. if you take your average white kid whose parents didn’t go to fancy school and who aren’t giving tons of money, I really don’t think they are going to do any better at a private school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The rich students in MCPS have the same advantages. It’s really a rich vs poor issue not a private vs public issue. But yes, it is really unfair!
Private schools do have the advantage of better school counselors. I find it odd that admissions requires school counselor recommendations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Between their inflated grades and $$ to do early decision (because they can pay), this system seems so rigged. Anyone else notice this?
You MUST be joking with your talk about inflated grading when your kid goes to Montgomery County. You can get an A one semester and a D another and get a B for the final grade. MCPS also gives full credit for homework if there is a “good faith effort.” - no points taken off for accuracy or completeness. Also, you can’t get below a 50%. My kid at private doesn’t have any of this nonsense. She earns her grades.
My kid loves pointing out how their public school friend went from all As in all advanced classes at their public to needing tutoring to maintain Bs and Cs. I can’t speak for all privates, but there is definitely not grade inflation at our school. And yes, even the bottom of the class gets accepted to good colleges.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Between their inflated grades and $$ to do early decision (because they can pay), this system seems so rigged. Anyone else notice this?
You MUST be joking with your talk about inflated grading when your kid goes to Montgomery County. You can get an A one semester and a D another and get a B for the final grade. MCPS also gives full credit for homework if there is a “good faith effort.” - no points taken off for accuracy or completeness. Also, you can’t get below a 50%. My kid at private doesn’t have any of this nonsense. She earns her grades.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The rich students in MCPS have the same advantages. It’s really a rich vs poor issue not a private vs public issue. But yes, it is really unfair!
It's actually not. Private schools have the benefit of lower student to college counselor ratios. And it helps. I have a niece at an expensive but middling private high school in Montgomery County. Proportionally, the college matriculation stats at this school are mind boggling and I know her peers aren't taking the amount of AP classes, say, kids in the 'W' zoned schools are taking and their standardized tests scores are likely not better. But their college counseling admissions staff really pounds the pavement for these kids - 85% of their graduating students received merit scholarships. And given the income level of these parents, those kids don't even need the money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Between their inflated grades and $$ to do early decision (because they can pay), this system seems so rigged. Anyone else notice this?
You MUST be joking with your talk about inflated grading when your kid goes to Montgomery County. You can get an A one semester and a D another and get a B for the final grade. MCPS also gives full credit for homework if there is a “good faith effort.” - no points taken off for accuracy or completeness. Also, you can’t get below a 50%. My kid at private doesn’t have any of this nonsense. She earns her grades.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The rich students in MCPS have the same advantages. It’s really a rich vs poor issue not a private vs public issue. But yes, it is really unfair!
It's actually not. Private schools have the benefit of lower student to college counselor ratios. And it helps. I have a niece at an expensive but middling private high school in Montgomery County. Proportionally, the college matriculation stats at this school are mind boggling and I know her peers aren't taking the amount of AP classes, say, kids in the 'W' zoned schools are taking and their standardized tests scores are likely not better. But their college counseling admissions staff really pounds the pavement for these kids - 85% of their graduating students received merit scholarships. And given the income level of these parents, those kids don't even need the money.
So, 85% of their students ended up at lower tier schools where they are really standing out above the crowd? I don't think that's what "W" zoned families find ideal.
No - they ended up at very competitive colleges, including some Ivy League institutions. They have the kind of advantages you just don’t and will never have in public school.
Anonymous wrote:I took my kid out of public school because of the ridiculous grading policies. He went from straight As to a mix of As, Bs, and Cs. I paid a lot of money for the switch because education isn’t just about learning content. It’s more about learning life skills like punctuality, respect, hard work, etc. Sadly, those life skills aren’t being taught in public school anymore. On my son’s last day in public school, a student threw a bottle of water at the teacher. That would’ve been a serious offense in his current school. The kid was brought back to class 20 minutes later Luke nothing happened. No wonder the teachers are quitting and not even going into teaching these days.
Anonymous wrote:Between their inflated grades and $$ to do early decision (because they can pay), this system seems so rigged. Anyone else notice this?