Anonymous wrote:Wow. There is nothing that APS parents won’t complain about. A paragraph? Really?!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why wouldn't they make kids do this for HB too?
I'm OP. The way it was explained during the Arlington Tech info session is it was basically a way to make sure the student had a general understanding of what the program is before applying. In its arrogance, everyone probably assumes HB is the crown jewel so of course everyone wants to go there no matter what it is exactly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why wouldn't they make kids do this for HB too?
Because there are no specific requirements to get into HB. It’s a lottery. If a kid is at HB, basically, they won a lottery.
I thought the Career Center was also a lottery.
Just the Arlington Tech program. Not the Career Center.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why wouldn't they make kids do this for HB too?
Because there are no specific requirements to get into HB. It’s a lottery. If a kid is at HB, basically, they won a lottery.
I thought the Career Center was also a lottery.
Anonymous wrote:I wondered about this too. My (uninformed) guess is that the goal is to weed out the kids who aren't truly interested, and who would end up declining a spot if offered, by making them put a tiny bit of work in up front to get in the lottery.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why wouldn't they make kids do this for HB too?
Because there are no specific requirements to get into HB. It’s a lottery. If a kid is at HB, basically, they won a lottery.
Anonymous wrote:Why wouldn't they make kids do this for HB too?
Anonymous wrote:So if it has no bearing on the lottery, what's the real point? Are they going to turn down, or call a student whose paragraph doesn't indicate an understanding of the program before letting them in? I don't see how they can require a statement that has no bearing on a straight lottery system.
Anonymous wrote:Why wouldn't they make kids do this for HB too?