Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you still apply to AT right now? Is it too late?
You can but you will be at the bottom of the waitlist. We are 42 and there has been little movement unfortunately
Anonymous wrote:I've been surprised by how little movement there has been on the waitlist. I had heard in the past kids over 100 on the waitlist got in and am wondering when the movement starts. We have moved up just 3 spots. I was expecting to move much more based on feedback from past years. Today was the deadline to accept spots and I guess I thought there would be a big move today but there was nothing-- maybe it hasn't updated? Or maybe families accept the spots "just in case" knowing they can change their mind as they get closer?
Anonymous wrote:Can you still apply to AT right now? Is it too late?
Anonymous wrote:This is PP above. Also something that I noticed with my DD's group is that there are advantages to not going to the same school as your friends. At this age, the the big high school has cliques form and your kid may end up being left out, even with kids they've been friends with forever. However, when they are at different schools, it becomes a non-issue because the friends can still be their old selves with each other and not have to put on whatever high school persona they have developed.
Anonymous wrote:We're passing on AT due to the team project requirements. My son has been burned in middle school with teammates (friends) not pulling their weight on assignments requiring him to do their portion and/or lower his grade. He knows he will face group projects again in high school but for his interest and chosen fields of study (computer science, business), he feels more confident if he is responsible for the bulk of his assignments or project work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Social Butterfly is not a usual description of an AT student. They aren't all introverts, but not many big extroverts attend that school. If DC needs a big social scene, it might not be the best fit. Also, it really is smaller, so is not a big social pool in any case.
It's 700 kids. That's not small. Yes, compared to 3K but not small. My kid is a social butterfly and loves it there.
When the new campus is finished, how large will Tech grow? 1600 students?
Spot on! So they'll shove 1800 in there.(not joking).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Social Butterfly is not a usual description of an AT student. They aren't all introverts, but not many big extroverts attend that school. If DC needs a big social scene, it might not be the best fit. Also, it really is smaller, so is not a big social pool in any case.
It's 700 kids. That's not small. Yes, compared to 3K but not small. My kid is a social butterfly and loves it there.
When the new campus is finished, how large will Tech grow? 1600 students?
Anonymous wrote:I have younger kids, but these descriptions seem to fit what we have seen with neighbors who have gone to AT instead of our neighborhood school.
Many kids are thriving, and I am so glad this awesome program is a thing! I'm not sure it'll be right for my kids, but we'll see when we get there.