Anonymous wrote:"I would found an institution where any person can find instruction in any study"
Except for your child.
Anonymous wrote:My nephew attended a DC public school was ranked 5th in his class, recieved the Gates Millenium Scholarship and was accepted into Harvard. But Howard and Georgetown turned him down. My niece, his younger sister is poised to be validictorian for her senior class in 2016 and she is ready for Yale. Attended elementary schools in southeast dc...homeschool during middle-school years and both attended comprehensive high-schools...and not WILSON for God's sake.
Anonymous wrote:"I would found an institution where any person can find instruction in any study"
Except for your child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't send a kid to a lower-performing school just to gain an edge in college admissions. The risk of a kid going off his current path is too high, and the chance of getting into an Ivy is too low. I'd just do it because it's what I could afford, and because the kid would get some experiences not possible in schools where everyone is rich.
Yes. Looking at the DCPS profile, Cardozo had 2% advanced in math and 5% advanced in reading. If you really think he is capable of getting 5s across the board on AP tests, how much benefit do you think he'd get from the classes? I think he'd be far better off at a selective DCPS high school, such as Banneker or SWW.
Yeah, and even if you didn't want/couldn't do Banneker or SWW, or wanted the experience of a non-Wilson HS...it can't be that hard to OOB into Eastern which, at least, has an IB program. I think it's still small and new enough that a kid as driven as this could be a big fish in a small pond but at least he'd have teachers with a bit more experience teaching advanced classes and more students able to fill seats in those classes.
Eastern is an IB school?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't send a kid to a lower-performing school just to gain an edge in college admissions. The risk of a kid going off his current path is too high, and the chance of getting into an Ivy is too low. I'd just do it because it's what I could afford, and because the kid would get some experiences not possible in schools where everyone is rich.
Yes. Looking at the DCPS profile, Cardozo had 2% advanced in math and 5% advanced in reading. If you really think he is capable of getting 5s across the board on AP tests, how much benefit do you think he'd get from the classes? I think he'd be far better off at a selective DCPS high school, such as Banneker or SWW.
Yeah, and even if you didn't want/couldn't do Banneker or SWW, or wanted the experience of a non-Wilson HS...it can't be that hard to OOB into Eastern which, at least, has an IB program. I think it's still small and new enough that a kid as driven as this could be a big fish in a small pond but at least he'd have teachers with a bit more experience teaching advanced classes and more students able to fill seats in those classes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't send a kid to a lower-performing school just to gain an edge in college admissions. The risk of a kid going off his current path is too high, and the chance of getting into an Ivy is too low. I'd just do it because it's what I could afford, and because the kid would get some experiences not possible in schools where everyone is rich.
Yes. Looking at the DCPS profile, Cardozo had 2% advanced in math and 5% advanced in reading. If you really think he is capable of getting 5s across the board on AP tests, how much benefit do you think he'd get from the classes? I think he'd be far better off at a selective DCPS high school, such as Banneker or SWW.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't send a kid to a lower-performing school just to gain an edge in college admissions. The risk of a kid going off his current path is too high, and the chance of getting into an Ivy is too low. I'd just do it because it's what I could afford, and because the kid would get some experiences not possible in schools where everyone is rich.
Yes. Looking at the DCPS profile, Cardozo had 2% advanced in math and 5% advanced in reading. If you really think he is capable of getting 5s across the board on AP tests, how much benefit do you think he'd get from the classes? I think he'd be far better off at a selective DCPS high school, such as Banneker or SWW.
Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't send a kid to a lower-performing school just to gain an edge in college admissions. The risk of a kid going off his current path is too high, and the chance of getting into an Ivy is too low. I'd just do it because it's what I could afford, and because the kid would get some experiences not possible in schools where everyone is rich.
Anonymous wrote:"I would found an institution where any person can find instruction in any study"
Except for your child.