Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:amaheshw wrote:Anytime have thoughts on RMIB vs Kennedy IB? I understand that the curriculum is standardized, but RM is larger and better known than Kennedy. Any objective advice on how to choose one over the other?
RMIB has the stronger cohort and curriculum. The curricula are not exactly the same, though of course they meet IB standards. If your objective is top rigor, RMIB, though know it will be intense. If you're just looking for an IB diploma, and an experience that is a little less intense, Kennedy.
If the commute to one school is significantly shorter than to the other school, choose the one with a shorter commute. Over time, that extra 30+ minutes a day add up, and good access to the school means it’s easier for you kid to be more fully involved in ECs, athletics, and general school activities (attending games, plays, dances, etc.)
Anonymous wrote:amaheshw wrote:Anytime have thoughts on RMIB vs Kennedy IB? I understand that the curriculum is standardized, but RM is larger and better known than Kennedy. Any objective advice on how to choose one over the other?
RMIB has the stronger cohort and curriculum. The curricula are not exactly the same, though of course they meet IB standards. If your objective is top rigor, RMIB, though know it will be intense. If you're just looking for an IB diploma, and an experience that is a little less intense, Kennedy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD always had MAP-M above 97th percentile, recently 98-99 (260+ score), and her MAP-R was at best 94th percentile (last score was 245). Applied to Blair and to RM and Kennedy IB. Got into both IBs but not into Blair. She is happy, I am utterly confused (not disappointed / complaining, just kind of “this doesn’t make sense” confused).
My guess is that more people with high MAP-M applied this year to Blair, than high MAP-R applied to RM. Also it may be (and it looks like) that your DC's scores in both cases are quite close to decision range.
You may be right! Another option that came to my mind was that essay matters more than we think.
Makes it even weirder for me that she was not even waitlisted or “wait pooled” for Blair, just straight “not selected”… as I said, she didn’t even want to go all that much, but as someone previously involved in selection / admissions, the logic escapes me. Especially since Blair likely skews boys (so she should have an advantage) and RMIB skews even or girls (so she should be at a disadvantage).
280+ for girls, 300+ for boys. 260 is way too low.
Interesting; this contradicts the 283 or 273 median that was quoted by posters above, as well as some scores from past admission threads.
That said, even if we accept the lower 273 median for Blair, I am curious how she got into RMIBnot sure what the acceptance rate for Blair is, but for RMIB it’s ~12-13% and I have to believe that there were people with higher scores in the mix.
RMIB looks at MAP R more than MAP M. It’s harder to get high percentiles for MAP R. Blair looks at MAP M. But most kids at low FARM schools have higher than 260 MAP M.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD always had MAP-M above 97th percentile, recently 98-99 (260+ score), and her MAP-R was at best 94th percentile (last score was 245). Applied to Blair and to RM and Kennedy IB. Got into both IBs but not into Blair. She is happy, I am utterly confused (not disappointed / complaining, just kind of “this doesn’t make sense” confused).
My guess is that more people with high MAP-M applied this year to Blair, than high MAP-R applied to RM. Also it may be (and it looks like) that your DC's scores in both cases are quite close to decision range.
You may be right! Another option that came to my mind was that essay matters more than we think.
Makes it even weirder for me that she was not even waitlisted or “wait pooled” for Blair, just straight “not selected”… as I said, she didn’t even want to go all that much, but as someone previously involved in selection / admissions, the logic escapes me. Especially since Blair likely skews boys (so she should have an advantage) and RMIB skews even or girls (so she should be at a disadvantage).
280+ for girls, 300+ for boys. 260 is way too low.
Interesting; this contradicts the 283 or 273 median that was quoted by posters above, as well as some scores from past admission threads.
That said, even if we accept the lower 273 median for Blair, I am curious how she got into RMIBnot sure what the acceptance rate for Blair is, but for RMIB it’s ~12-13% and I have to believe that there were people with higher scores in the mix.
300 plus is not accurate for boys. Not even a little. Plenty of boys accepted in the 280s and some below.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD always had MAP-M above 97th percentile, recently 98-99 (260+ score), and her MAP-R was at best 94th percentile (last score was 245). Applied to Blair and to RM and Kennedy IB. Got into both IBs but not into Blair. She is happy, I am utterly confused (not disappointed / complaining, just kind of “this doesn’t make sense” confused).
My guess is that more people with high MAP-M applied this year to Blair, than high MAP-R applied to RM. Also it may be (and it looks like) that your DC's scores in both cases are quite close to decision range.
You may be right! Another option that came to my mind was that essay matters more than we think.
Makes it even weirder for me that she was not even waitlisted or “wait pooled” for Blair, just straight “not selected”… as I said, she didn’t even want to go all that much, but as someone previously involved in selection / admissions, the logic escapes me. Especially since Blair likely skews boys (so she should have an advantage) and RMIB skews even or girls (so she should be at a disadvantage).
280+ for girls, 300+ for boys. 260 is way too low.
Wow, this is quite crazy. Do you know how many spots in Blair are not filled from TPMS?
I was told that approx. 50 slots go to TPMS students.
That’s not helpful this year. This is the first year that the middle school magnet were selected by lottery. In past years about 40 kids ended up at Blair. The poster above was asking about actual numbers this year. Is it different from in the past?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD always had MAP-M above 97th percentile, recently 98-99 (260+ score), and her MAP-R was at best 94th percentile (last score was 245). Applied to Blair and to RM and Kennedy IB. Got into both IBs but not into Blair. She is happy, I am utterly confused (not disappointed / complaining, just kind of “this doesn’t make sense” confused).
My guess is that more people with high MAP-M applied this year to Blair, than high MAP-R applied to RM. Also it may be (and it looks like) that your DC's scores in both cases are quite close to decision range.
You may be right! Another option that came to my mind was that essay matters more than we think.
Makes it even weirder for me that she was not even waitlisted or “wait pooled” for Blair, just straight “not selected”… as I said, she didn’t even want to go all that much, but as someone previously involved in selection / admissions, the logic escapes me. Especially since Blair likely skews boys (so she should have an advantage) and RMIB skews even or girls (so she should be at a disadvantage).
280+ for girls, 300+ for boys. 260 is way too low.
Interesting; this contradicts the 283 or 273 median that was quoted by posters above, as well as some scores from past admission threads.
That said, even if we accept the lower 273 median for Blair, I am curious how she got into RMIBnot sure what the acceptance rate for Blair is, but for RMIB it’s ~12-13% and I have to believe that there were people with higher scores in the mix.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD always had MAP-M above 97th percentile, recently 98-99 (260+ score), and her MAP-R was at best 94th percentile (last score was 245). Applied to Blair and to RM and Kennedy IB. Got into both IBs but not into Blair. She is happy, I am utterly confused (not disappointed / complaining, just kind of “this doesn’t make sense” confused).
My guess is that more people with high MAP-M applied this year to Blair, than high MAP-R applied to RM. Also it may be (and it looks like) that your DC's scores in both cases are quite close to decision range.
You may be right! Another option that came to my mind was that essay matters more than we think.
Makes it even weirder for me that she was not even waitlisted or “wait pooled” for Blair, just straight “not selected”… as I said, she didn’t even want to go all that much, but as someone previously involved in selection / admissions, the logic escapes me. Especially since Blair likely skews boys (so she should have an advantage) and RMIB skews even or girls (so she should be at a disadvantage).
280+ for girls, 300+ for boys. 260 is way too low.
Interesting; this contradicts the 283 or 273 median that was quoted by posters above, as well as some scores from past admission threads.
That said, even if we accept the lower 273 median for Blair, I am curious how she got into RMIBnot sure what the acceptance rate for Blair is, but for RMIB it’s ~12-13% and I have to believe that there were people with higher scores in the mix.
Anonymous wrote:My daughter who was just invited to Blair SMCS had a map-m of 271. Coming from a “regular” middle school that didn’t offer math team, science fair, robotics club, or any math/science opportunities beyond the standard accelerated math track (geometry in 8th). I think essay mattered; I know she talked about the type of projects she has enjoyed, some stuff she’s explored on her own, and what she was hoping for in a high school experience. Also got into regional IB (map-r 256), and didn’t apply to rmib.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD always had MAP-M above 97th percentile, recently 98-99 (260+ score), and her MAP-R was at best 94th percentile (last score was 245). Applied to Blair and to RM and Kennedy IB. Got into both IBs but not into Blair. She is happy, I am utterly confused (not disappointed / complaining, just kind of “this doesn’t make sense” confused).
My guess is that more people with high MAP-M applied this year to Blair, than high MAP-R applied to RM. Also it may be (and it looks like) that your DC's scores in both cases are quite close to decision range.
You may be right! Another option that came to my mind was that essay matters more than we think.
Makes it even weirder for me that she was not even waitlisted or “wait pooled” for Blair, just straight “not selected”… as I said, she didn’t even want to go all that much, but as someone previously involved in selection / admissions, the logic escapes me. Especially since Blair likely skews boys (so she should have an advantage) and RMIB skews even or girls (so she should be at a disadvantage).
280+ for girls, 300+ for boys. 260 is way too low.
Interesting; this contradicts the 283 or 273 median that was quoted by posters above, as well as some scores from past admission threads.
That said, even if we accept the lower 273 median for Blair, I am curious how she got into RMIBnot sure what the acceptance rate for Blair is, but for RMIB it’s ~12-13% and I have to believe that there were people with higher scores in the mix.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD always had MAP-M above 97th percentile, recently 98-99 (260+ score), and her MAP-R was at best 94th percentile (last score was 245). Applied to Blair and to RM and Kennedy IB. Got into both IBs but not into Blair. She is happy, I am utterly confused (not disappointed / complaining, just kind of “this doesn’t make sense” confused).
My guess is that more people with high MAP-M applied this year to Blair, than high MAP-R applied to RM. Also it may be (and it looks like) that your DC's scores in both cases are quite close to decision range.
You may be right! Another option that came to my mind was that essay matters more than we think.
Makes it even weirder for me that she was not even waitlisted or “wait pooled” for Blair, just straight “not selected”… as I said, she didn’t even want to go all that much, but as someone previously involved in selection / admissions, the logic escapes me. Especially since Blair likely skews boys (so she should have an advantage) and RMIB skews even or girls (so she should be at a disadvantage).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does admissions look at home school cohort?
A student from a weak homeschool needs magent a lot more than a student that has lots of APs and classmates to fill them.
If I were doing admissions, I'd select kids who don't already have a strong home school opportunity.
Admissions looks at both, basically top-performing kids across the board, with the understanding top-performing at a lower-resourced school won't look exactly the same.
Here we go again, effort to turn the high school magnets also into lottery and keep out Asians, wonder why MCPS hasn't done that yet!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD always had MAP-M above 97th percentile, recently 98-99 (260+ score), and her MAP-R was at best 94th percentile (last score was 245). Applied to Blair and to RM and Kennedy IB. Got into both IBs but not into Blair. She is happy, I am utterly confused (not disappointed / complaining, just kind of “this doesn’t make sense” confused).
My guess is that more people with high MAP-M applied this year to Blair, than high MAP-R applied to RM. Also it may be (and it looks like) that your DC's scores in both cases are quite close to decision range.
You may be right! Another option that came to my mind was that essay matters more than we think.
Makes it even weirder for me that she was not even waitlisted or “wait pooled” for Blair, just straight “not selected”… as I said, she didn’t even want to go all that much, but as someone previously involved in selection / admissions, the logic escapes me. Especially since Blair likely skews boys (so she should have an advantage) and RMIB skews even or girls (so she should be at a disadvantage).
280+ for girls, 300+ for boys. 260 is way too low.
Wow, this is quite crazy. Do you know how many spots in Blair are not filled from TPMS?
I was told that approx. 50 slots go to TPMS students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD always had MAP-M above 97th percentile, recently 98-99 (260+ score), and her MAP-R was at best 94th percentile (last score was 245). Applied to Blair and to RM and Kennedy IB. Got into both IBs but not into Blair. She is happy, I am utterly confused (not disappointed / complaining, just kind of “this doesn’t make sense” confused).
My guess is that more people with high MAP-M applied this year to Blair, than high MAP-R applied to RM. Also it may be (and it looks like) that your DC's scores in both cases are quite close to decision range.
You may be right! Another option that came to my mind was that essay matters more than we think.
Makes it even weirder for me that she was not even waitlisted or “wait pooled” for Blair, just straight “not selected”… as I said, she didn’t even want to go all that much, but as someone previously involved in selection / admissions, the logic escapes me. Especially since Blair likely skews boys (so she should have an advantage) and RMIB skews even or girls (so she should be at a disadvantage).
280+ for girls, 300+ for boys. 260 is way too low.
Wow, this is quite crazy. Do you know how many spots in Blair are not filled from TPMS?