Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
So the trend is kids have to be exceptional in Verbal to get admitted to HGC.If any kid is brilliant in Math but average/above average in Verbal, then the chances of HGC become low (waitlisted/rejected). But these kids do get into the MS magnet program like one at TP. HGC is only about Humanities.
How do you know this?
Anonymous wrote:
So the trend is kids have to be exceptional in Verbal to get admitted to HGC.If any kid is brilliant in Math but average/above average in Verbal, then the chances of HGC become low (waitlisted/rejected). But these kids do get into the MS magnet program like one at TP. HGC is only about Humanities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not thePP you are responding to, but I think folks just don't understand the process. That's why this thread is a good idea.
How will knowing the different medians for the different HGCs help people understand the process?
Well, for one, one might decide to not live in the Cold Spring Cluster, because it's ridiculously hard to meet those median scores, and means nothing about whether the child is qualified or not to be in an HGC.
Well my child was waitlisted several years ago. DC had scores higher than median for all programs but Cold Spring. In Cold Spring, child had one score (verbal) just below median, all others were above. Appeals did not help. Several years forward, child is in TPMS magnet.
We are not moving.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not thePP you are responding to, but I think folks just don't understand the process. That's why this thread is a good idea.
How will knowing the different medians for the different HGCs help people understand the process?
Well, for one, one might decide to not live in the Cold Spring Cluster, because it's ridiculously hard to meet those median scores, and means nothing about whether the child is qualified or not to be in an HGC.
.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not thePP you are responding to, but I think folks just don't understand the process. That's why this thread is a good idea.
How will knowing the different medians for the different HGCs help people understand the process?
Well, for one, one might decide to not live in the Cold Spring Cluster, because it's ridiculously hard to meet those median scores, and means nothing about whether the child is qualified or not to be in an HGC.
Do you really think that people will say to themselves, "I won't live in Potomac, in case I have a child who would really benefit from an HGC in fourth and fifth grade but won't get really high scores on a test that MCPS might continue using but might not"?
(No, I don't know anything about MCPS's plans to continue using or not continue using that test. It's just that everything is subject to change, and you shouldn't assume that the future will be exactly like the present.)
Anonymous wrote:Different Poster - I think it helps future applicants to understand the process when they see the caliber of admitted students in the Centers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not thePP you are responding to, but I think folks just don't understand the process. That's why this thread is a good idea.
How will knowing the different medians for the different HGCs help people understand the process?
Well, for one, one might decide to not live in the Cold Spring Cluster, because it's ridiculously hard to meet those median scores, and means nothing about whether the child is qualified or not to be in an HGC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not thePP you are responding to, but I think folks just don't understand the process. That's why this thread is a good idea.
How will knowing the different medians for the different HGCs help people understand the process?
Anonymous wrote:Not thePP you are responding to, but I think folks just don't understand the process. That's why this thread is a good idea.