Anonymous wrote:I can’t give details now about our interview because perhaps we are part of a small group who experienced the process but there were some very awkward moments today which makes us feel like there should just be a lottery.
Anonymous wrote:While I’ve expressed my disdain for the lack of an entrance exam on various Walls threads, I will say that today’s interview process was quite organized and well-run. I loved how there were students in the waiting area to answer questions. And whereas I was convinced that our late afternoon interview time would start late, everything started on time.
I suspect my child did a better job interviewing than me!
Anonymous wrote:While I’ve expressed my disdain for the lack of an entrance exam on various Walls threads, I will say that today’s interview process was quite organized and well-run. I loved how there were students in the waiting area to answer questions. And whereas I was convinced that our late afternoon interview time would start late, everything started on time.
I suspect my child did a better job interviewing than me!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How many kids are interviewed, for how many spots? And are decisions released at the end of March along with the general lottery results?
They interview the top 500 applicants (determined by GPA; this year the cut off was 3.87). Last year they offered 170 seats in the lottery (the remaining kids of the 500 interviewed go on the wait list). They will offer those 170 spots based purely on the kid's score (31 points possible for interview score) obtained in a ten minute interview. How they make sure all the many ifferent interviewing panels "grade" applicants with the same level of rigor (or lack thereof)- who knows?
Being there today and seeing all the applicants and parents milling around was a reminder - there are a lot of kids that want to go to Walls next year (500 of them at this point!) and no easy way to fairly divide a scarce resource (spots at a highly coveted school).
DCPS probably ought to take the arbitrary factor out and just run a lottery for the top 500 applicants (but then, of course, they couldn't engineer any desired class balance - whether that be gender, race, ward, or whatever).
Anonymous wrote:How many kids are interviewed, for how many spots? And are decisions released at the end of March along with the general lottery results?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is kind of hard to believe that admittance at this point all comes down to one ten minute interview!
And yet it does. But don't DARE to ask on DCUM about the interview. They are very prickly about this.
Anonymous wrote:It is kind of hard to believe that admittance at this point all comes down to one ten minute interview!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That was a very strange interview. The fact that it counts so much towards acceptance is problematic.
yeah, my kids' was 2 minutes long 2 years ago.
it was ridiculous.
Two years ago is not relevant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That was a very strange interview. The fact that it counts so much towards acceptance is problematic.
yeah, my kids' was 2 minutes long 2 years ago.
it was ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That was a very strange interview. The fact that it counts so much towards acceptance is problematic.
What happened?