Anonymous wrote:I don't believe a magnet program has to accept students with academic challenges...it's just not allowed to discriminate by race/gender/ethnicity/physical challenges....Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it's expected/inevitable that an interview is subjective...otherwise the computer could just spit out the names of the top 100 testers, and that is the accepted class
And the 'interviewer' is correct, that a person who has to put in 3hrs plus a night in middle school will have a nervous breakdown with the Walls' workload
Actually, the family whose kid was rejected because he puts in 3 hours a night now might have a good reason to sue, if for instance the student has a 504 plan or other ADA accomodations and is one who needs extra time for things.
how would that change the fact that, instead of needing to do 3.5 hrs of homework a night, that child now needs to do 7 hrs? And that this is not likely a sustainable situation?Anonymous wrote:
Actually, the family whose kid was rejected because he puts in 3 hours a night now might have a good reason to sue, if for instance the student has a 504 plan or other ADA accomodations and is one who needs extra time for things.
Isn't that the whole purpose of the interviews, to evaluate which applicants are likely to enroll and succeed? and I'm sure the teachers' input will outweigh the students....I actually believe the students are there mostly as 'foils', so the applicant will feel somewhat at ease in a room of other teensAnonymous wrote:I agree with PP. The interviewer said the boy was an A student. Results should matter not one person's uninformed guess about whether someone might or might not be able to handle a demanding high school workload.
I don't believe a magnet program has to accept students with academic challenges...it's just not allowed to discriminate by race/gender/ethnicity/physical challenges....Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it's expected/inevitable that an interview is subjective...otherwise the computer could just spit out the names of the top 100 testers, and that is the accepted class
And the 'interviewer' is correct, that a person who has to put in 3hrs plus a night in middle school will have a nervous breakdown with the Walls' workload
Actually, the family whose kid was rejected because he puts in 3 hours a night now might have a good reason to sue, if for instance the student has a 504 plan or other ADA accomodations and is one who needs extra time for things.
Anonymous wrote:I think it's expected/inevitable that an interview is subjective...otherwise the computer could just spit out the names of the top 100 testers, and that is the accepted class
And the 'interviewer' is correct, that a person who has to put in 3hrs plus a night in middle school will have a nervous breakdown with the Walls' workload
Anonymous wrote:Yeah, pretty much this. As interviewers, while we took questions, it was mostly to look at the students and parents to see whether we thought they would fit in. For example: the school didn't want to base it completely off exam scores, but also look at the personality of the student and whether they would fit in. There were definitely some students with amazing exam scores and grades that me (and the rest in my room) gave lower scores to then those who didn't do so well, simply because they came off as being too full of themselves, or like they wouldn't fit well with the school.Anonymous wrote:Perhaps they considered it an interview for you, not them. After all, they don't really need to sell the school to you at this point.
I remember on who had all As, but was telling us how he was a good student and to get all those As he often worked 3-4 hours of studying and would stay up extremely late. We didn't think he would be able to handle the work load at walls (which is condsiderably greater then most schools in the city, especially middle schools) if he was working for 3-4 hours a night to succeed at middle school, how much would he be working to succeed at high school?
Yeah, pretty much this. As interviewers, while we took questions, it was mostly to look at the students and parents to see whether we thought they would fit in. For example: the school didn't want to base it completely off exam scores, but also look at the personality of the student and whether they would fit in. There were definitely some students with amazing exam scores and grades that me (and the rest in my room) gave lower scores to then those who didn't do so well, simply because they came off as being too full of themselves, or like they wouldn't fit well with the school.Anonymous wrote:Perhaps they considered it an interview for you, not them. After all, they don't really need to sell the school to you at this point.