Anonymous wrote:I'm no sure.
If your kid is likely to win national science fairs or international math competitions, go for it.
If your kid is just really smart, they might be better off being at the top of their base high school. Life will be more relaxed for the whole family.
At TJ my kid was a NMSF but was one of about 150. While she would have been at star elsewhere, she was middle of the pack at TJ.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dont colleges know that a 4.0 (w) from TJ is equivalent to a 4.5 or so from a non -TJ HS?
Maybe at UVA, but some young admissions assistant in another state won't necessarily know.
If you don’t know what TJ (and Stuyvesant, and Bronx Science, and Masterman, and so on) is/are, you are not making decisions in a college admissions office of any significance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dont colleges know that a 4.0 (w) from TJ is equivalent to a 4.5 or so from a non -TJ HS?
Maybe at UVA, but some young admissions assistant in another state won't necessarily know.
Anonymous wrote:Dont colleges know that a 4.0 (w) from TJ is equivalent to a 4.5 or so from a non -TJ HS?
Anonymous wrote:The experience is amazing but the grading is extremely tough and inspite of being the brightest kids, unfortunately it puts them at a disadvantage during Grading and then college admissions. Its a little unfair that students of regular High schools get higher grades due to relatively easier course material and grading, while the brighters ones at TJ struggle . So yes if experience is all you are looking for, its amazing. But if we had to do it all over again, no we wound not. The pressue on the kids and the impact during the college application process is not worth it
Anonymous wrote:DC is half way through and I’m positive if they had the choice to make again they would still decide to go. Much better “fit” than our base school was vibe-wise and in terms of the intensity of academics. Plus DC likely would not have made the HS team for their sport whereas at TJ they are a varsity team member so that’s been a fun experience.
Tips - get involved in a more time intensive EC right away fall semester. Band, sport, one of the academic ECs that meets more often - anything to see the same group of people multiple times a week for a bit. It will help with the friendship jump.
For Math (Research statistics at first) it is not uncommon to have teachers that don’t really teach it directly. Anticipate this and plan to find other kids to work with for problem solving.
For the love of all things holy do not take Spanish at TJ. It is very hard.
Knock out a class the summer before freshman year such as PE. If your kid wants to do band or orchestra it will make it a lot easier to fit things in.
Anonymous wrote:The experience is amazing but the grading is extremely tough and inspite of being the brightest kids, unfortunately it puts them at a disadvantage during Grading and then college admissions. Its a little unfair that students of regular High schools get higher grades due to relatively easier course material and grading, while the brighters ones at TJ struggle . So yes if experience is all you are looking for, its amazing. But if we had to do it all over again, no we wound not. The pressue on the kids and the impact during the college application process is not worth it
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dont colleges know that a 4.0 (w) from TJ is equivalent to a 4.5 or so from a non -TJ HS?
I've yet to meet a college that cares about anything except your unweighted GPA.
Much of the TJ class manages to keep the unweighted GPA above 3.0, there may be fewer than 5 to 10% that go below that. college admissions dont compare TJ to non-TJ, instead they compare one TJ applicant to another TJ applicant. So it is better to be in the top half of the class to begin with and stay there.
Honestly, I don't know that this is true. Maybe. MIT's admission process felt very check-the-box when the Tech did a deep dove into the process. How could it not be? 10K applications to sort through? It was a scoring rubric of test scores and GPA and either you were competitive or you weren't. If you weren't they didnt look at your application and it was discarded. These days the average MIT GPA is 3.97? SAT math 800? 1590 average? Very little margin for less than perfect.