Anonymous wrote:Holy shit- look at the topics. Amazing.
http://student.societyforscience.org/intel-sts-2014-finalists
Anonymous wrote:That is great...and at a public school too! Just goes to show.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The students were from the Blair magnet program-a school within a school.
Take a look at their projects. It seems the magnet program has nothing to do with it. These are driven kids who will achieve anywhere.
Correction: it is less a school within a school than a decade ago. Zoned kids can take all magnet level classes, unlike before.
Anonymous wrote:The students were from the Blair magnet program-a school within a school.
Take a look at their projects. It seems the magnet program has nothing to do with it. These are driven kids who will achieve anywhere.
Anonymous wrote:In your first two years at blair, you take double periods of chem, physics, biology,and earth sciences, along with computer science and 'Research'. Then your last two years, you have a faculty person advise you, and help you to get paired up with an investigator/academic...sometimes they are researchers at NIH, NIST, etc. etc. You work for them in the summer between junior and senior year, and meet with them periodically both years as you develop your project, under their guidance and mentorship.
This is how it used to be done, back in the 90s...we used to have a lot of westinghouse winners back then, now its intel...bottom line, we had a solid education prior to the research, and really great teachers and collaborators to guide us....it didn't just come out of thin air. They helped us through and through, as a good school with good teachers should.
Moco, and the blair magnet, is one of the best value educations you can get in this country.
- Blair magnet alumni, and now mommy to MoCo students
Anonymous wrote:Not bad, for a magnet school. Thomas Jefferson had 6.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it is 3. Still, excellent.
Oops. Three of the 40 are from Blair and one from Frederick. And a whole ton of semifinalists from other maryland schools.
Something is going well over there (I live in DC).
Question - do private high schools generally not pursue this award agressively? Scanning the finalist list for the whole country, all the schools I recognize in other states are all public schools.
Anonymous wrote:Not bad, for a magnet school. Thomas Jefferson had 6.
Anonymous wrote:Blair does very well in selective college acceptances too, if the stats from the annual Bethesda mag table are any indication. No clue if that's all magnet or mostly magnet kids or proportional representation from all programs. Whatever the case, it's a school that obviously is known and respected where it matters, for good reason. (I'm not in the Blair district fwiw, I'm in BCC but would love to see my kids wind up in the science magnet program although doubt they will!)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Why not post some awards non-magnet kids get. I know they get awards. It's like the magnet kids are the chosen ones. You should give a shout out to the rest.
PP, if you think that the non-magnet kids should get a shout out too, then by all means, you should give them a shout out! That would be great. Start a thread on awards won by non-magnet kids at Blair!
(I am not the OP, by the way.)
Anonymous wrote:Holy shit- look at the topics. Amazing.
http://student.societyforscience.org/intel-sts-2014-finalists