Anonymous wrote:Ha! I just want to say my kid is in 9th at a W school and is taking no APs and Geometry! I literally love that you all talk down about him. This area is crazy. Come back and see me in 10 years after you push your kids to do everything they can to get into an Ivy league school and spend their entire high school careers trying to do it, all to impress you or to literally break their backs and burn out trying to achieve their parent's dreams for them. Meanwhile, my "average" kid will love high school, work hard and succeed in his chosen field (that he himself chooses). Good luck crazy people.
Anonymous wrote:Hi everyone, I would really appreciate your input and advice on this. We are thinking of moving houses, and our children are in ES currently. Here are our two options:
1. Stay in our wonderful, walkable neighborhood where ES is great, but MS/HS are not good, and plan to go the Magnet Program route to avoid local schools.
2. Move to an area where the kids would be assigned to Churchill/Wooton/Whitman clusters.
For the sake of argument, let's assume magnet admission can happen (I understand that it's probably its own can of worms, and is not at all guaranteed, but let's do away with that issue for now and just say we can go to magnet programs/schools in MoCo for middle and high school). The question then is:
What's better: a 'good' high school in the area, or the magnet program in a not-so-good school? (What would you recommend we aim for? Do you have kids in magnet MS/HS programs and how do you think that compares to the regular 'good' MS/HS? What would you do if you were us and had to do it over again?) If you have comments on a specific MS, or a specific magnet program in the area, please share those as well.....
Thanks!!!!
This was us. We were lucky enough to get into magnet MS/HS but if not, we our backup plan was to move. I cannot tell you which route (magnet vs. "good" MS/HS) is better because we have experience with only one of two. I can, however, tell you without any hesitation that what you get out of magnet programs (particularly HS magnets) is invaluable. It saddens me to see MCPS's effort to slowly normalize the magnet programs. It is such a wonderful and unique program.
Anonymous wrote:Same strugle here. DC went fron HGC to TPMS. Now he wants to go to Blair. DC is very unlikely to get into top 10 colleges if she attends Blair, but her chance to get into one of the top will be greatly increased if she came back to home school, one of the W schools. I am dying for her to go to a top school but don't how to convince her to attend home school. I don't want to sound shallow because I still want to be her role model. Any suggestion?
Anonymous wrote:Sorry to bump up this very old thread, what is a "W" school by the way? Is it a general term for good schools? Or is it one of the below schools starting with a W:
Winston Churchill
Walter Johnson
Watkins Mill
Walt Whitman
Wooton
Wheaton
Anonymous wrote:For parents who aim at good university:
MS magnet, then W HIGH school.
Nobody is going to pick child with weak GPA from HS magnet over student with great GPA from W HS. No matter how famous your magnet.
It is extremely difficult to get mostly A in HS magnet. Unless your child is really very very gifted and motivated.
Most kids want a bit of air too, and not to be burned in HS before college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would prefer magnets for my kids. "Good" ms/HS in mcps = wealthy. I'd prefer my children to be in a different environment.
I think that the students in the test-in magnets are probably wealthier, as a group, than the typical MCPS students. 8th graders at Roberto Clemente go to New York (humanities) and Boston (math/science) for a week. The Boston field trip costs close to $900.
Anonymous wrote:I would prefer magnets for my kids. "Good" ms/HS in mcps = wealthy. I'd prefer my children to be in a different environment.
Anonymous wrote:The quality of the magnet consortia schools (loiderman, parkland, etc.) is lower than the competitive magnets (Takoma, Clemente, Eastern).