Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, you mentioned applying to private schools. Perhaps this link might be useful: http://goo.gl/GgQvR
Wow!! DCPS doesn't even male the cut. I wish this link had listed the "high performing charters"
Banneker and Walls were listed.
Yes they were listed but not even enough to make a wave.
I didn't' see a date on that spreadsheet, much less link to where the data came from?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, you mentioned applying to private schools. Perhaps this link might be useful: http://goo.gl/GgQvR
Wow!! DCPS doesn't even male the cut. I wish this link had listed the "high performing charters"
Banneker and Walls were listed.
Yes they were listed but not even enough to make a wave.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, you mentioned applying to private schools. Perhaps this link might be useful: http://goo.gl/GgQvR
Wow!! DCPS doesn't even male the cut. I wish this link had listed the "high performing charters"
Banneker and Walls were listed.
Anonymous wrote:Take the tutor advice with a grain of salt. My kid did not have a tutor, had good grades at Deal with minimal effort, had good PARCC scores, refused to study even a tiny bit for the Walls test but got in. Most kids don’t need a tutor. We did not apply to McKinley.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, you mentioned applying to private schools. Perhaps this link might be useful: http://goo.gl/GgQvR
Wow!! DCPS doesn't even male the cut. I wish this link had listed the "high performing charters"
Anonymous wrote:OP, I would suggest a tutor as the starting base. But if you decide to do private schools you are looking at hiring a private school consultant. Either way, good public school education is no longer "free". In order to be competitive one must put in the work: a tutor, a good number of volunteer hours, paid for enriching experiences, etc. That's how there are excellent public schools in the 'burbs because of the parents/school community value education enough to make it a private like school experience. DC lacks the school community experience because of the lottery and the upper middle class/wealthy go private in D.C. which leaves the rest of the population in an educational crisis.
Anonymous wrote:OP, you mentioned applying to private schools. Perhaps this link might be useful: http://goo.gl/GgQvR
Anonymous wrote:Thank you. Thus far DC has always had tests and grades adequate for McKinley eligibility. I am less sure how to evaluate the essay and interview standards.
How many kids were eligible for McKinley but did not match, or did not attend?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP's kid is only going into 7th next year.
The OP is doing well to try to gather information beforehand as the lottery process is generally unclear, riddled with admission scandals or some other political drama.
You're making me blush. I am trying to figure out reasonable expectations for a good-not-great student given the lottery results, new schools, etc. Yes, it is a year in advance but if we are going to apply to (and pay for) privates or potentially move, better to think about it early. My hope is that DC will make it into McKinley or Banneker or EC@Coolidge, but we will see.
Your kid will have an incredibly difficult time getting into Banneker, Wilson, SWW, and McKinley if he is not great. Which leaves you with choices: push him pretty hard and get a tutor to fill in gaps so that his GPA goes up, pay for private school or move. If I were you I wouldn't pay for private because it's likely you will end up paying for private and a tutor as DC schools tend to have larges gaps in the curriculum. So realistically, you are looking at a tutor now and hope the dividends pay off or move to suburbia. But be aware that half of everyone in suburbia has a tutor by 3rd/4th grade to make it to the gifted programs, magnet programs, specialized programs, etc.
-Banneker Grad, VCU (undergrad). Hopkins (med school)
Thank you! I guess my question is, given this year's lottery result of many empty seats at McKinley and Coolidge, plus the new Bard and possibly an expansion of Latin, are things going to be as competitive next year?