Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The strongest indicator of college readiness would be college admissions which is published by Bethesda magazine.
https://bethesdamagazine.com/bethesda-magazine/september-october-2018/where-bethesda-area-high-school-grads-applied-to-college/
Hadn't seen this before. This is really great. Thx!
It lines up perfectly with Blair accounting for roughly 30% of the county's NMSF too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The strongest indicator of college readiness would be college admissions which is published by Bethesda magazine.
https://bethesdamagazine.com/bethesda-magazine/september-october-2018/where-bethesda-area-high-school-grads-applied-to-college/
Hadn't seen this before. This is really great. Thx!

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The strongest indicator of college readiness would be college admissions which is published by Bethesda magazine.
Not really as those are self reported admitted. The cheating scandal shows that admitted isn’t the same as ready even if you could trust the data. Under that guise of your logic why not just rank the schools by graduation rates?
I'm sorry if this doesn't support the narrative you'd like but it is the best indicator of college readiness we have.
Anonymous wrote:US NEWS is lazy using AP/IB rates as "college readiness". It is, but graduating from high school = college readiness, heading to most colleges.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The strongest indicator of college readiness would be college admissions which is published by Bethesda magazine.
Not really as those are self reported admitted. The cheating scandal shows that admitted isn’t the same as ready even if you could trust the data. Under that guise of your logic why not just rank the schools by graduation rates?
I'm sorry if this doesn't support the narrative you'd like but it is the best indicator of college readiness we have.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The strongest indicator of college readiness would be college admissions which is published by Bethesda magazine.
https://bethesdamagazine.com/bethesda-magazine/september-october-2018/where-bethesda-area-high-school-grads-applied-to-college/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The strongest indicator of college readiness would be college admissions which is published by Bethesda magazine.
Not really as those are self reported admitted. The cheating scandal shows that admitted isn’t the same as ready even if you could trust the data. Under that guise of your logic why not just rank the schools by graduation rates?
Anonymous wrote:The strongest indicator of college readiness would be college admissions which is published by Bethesda magazine.
Anonymous wrote:The strongest indicator of college readiness would be college admissions which is published by Bethesda magazine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The only good and accurate measurement on USNews ranking is the college readiness indicator.
It's actually a fairly useless measurement, because it just tells you the percentage of 12th grade students that took and passed AP/IB exams.
For most of us on this board, our kids would meet that standard regardless of what school they attend. I'm much more interested in knowing how those types of students perform in different MCPS high schools, and this measurement gives you zero insight on that.
+1 This indicator is a reflection of SES.
https://www.usnews.com/education/best-high-schools/articles/rankings-faq
College readiness (30% of the ranking): The percentage of 12th graders from the class of 2016-2017 who took at least one AP or IB exam during high school and the percentage of 12th graders who passed at least one AP or IB exam in high school. Passing is weighted three times more than taking.
It also fosters harmful stereotypes about the value of segregated schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The only good and accurate measurement on USNews ranking is the college readiness indicator.
It's actually a fairly useless measurement, because it just tells you the percentage of 12th grade students that took and passed AP/IB exams.
For most of us on this board, our kids would meet that standard regardless of what school they attend. I'm much more interested in knowing how those types of students perform in different MCPS high schools, and this measurement gives you zero insight on that.
+1 This indicator is a reflection of SES.
https://www.usnews.com/education/best-high-schools/articles/rankings-faq
College readiness (30% of the ranking): The percentage of 12th graders from the class of 2016-2017 who took at least one AP or IB exam during high school and the percentage of 12th graders who passed at least one AP or IB exam in high school. Passing is weighted three times more than taking.
It also fosters harmful stereotypes about the value of segregated schools.
Anonymous wrote:Their listing is a joke.