Anonymous wrote:I do, actually. I've volunteered at Banneker over a four-year period, at the invitation of science teachers I met through a STEM mentoring organization I'm involved with.
Sorry, but the SAT scores and AP scores coming out of Banneker speak for themselves.
If the average MATH SAT score really is in the high 400s, at least half of the students don't have a firm grasp of algebra or geometry, let alone trig and calc. They also lack the requisite vocabulary and analytical skills to handle elite college-level humanities studies. Wish things were different.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. My DH does horribly on standardized tests. 900 on the SAT, yet graduated from an excellent private high school with a 3.9 GPA. He was offered a full ride to college based on merit. Majored in chemistry. Graduated at the top of his class and was offered a full ride to med school. The SAT says NOTHING about future college performance or future success.
Your DH is an extreme outlier.
FYI
The odd teenager is always going to freeze up on standardized tests, even if they could answer most of the questions correctly in a low-pressure setting. Colleges know this, helping explain why the Test Optional movement is steadily gaining ground nationally.
I'm just not buying that the SAT says "nothing" about future college performance, because the test just isn't difficult for a HS student who's well read and did OK in MS or HS algebra and geometry. SATs are pitched at an 8th or 9th grade level for strong students who aren't geniuses or prodigies.
If high SAT scores were out of reach for cohorts of the best-prepped low-SES minority students, there's no way that average scores at the 9 NYC magnet test-in high schools, where at-risk/FARMs students are strongly represented, would be 1200+. What's obviously happening at Banneker, and Eastern, Dunbar, Ballou, Anacostia, is that the the most able low SES students in the system seldom get the essential support/prep they need to score high.
The fact that the depressing status quo works for our politicians, ed leaders, and the bleeding hearts and apologists for DCPS' failings on this thread is shameful.
Agree 100% with this. Top privates and magnet schools have many minority students from poor backgrounds who do exceedingly well on the SAT. Kids are not doing well on the SAT from Banneker because the education is a joke. The SAT isn't rocket science. It's basic reading and math at the geometry level or below.
Sidwell, GDS, STA etc put many poor minority kids (and the rest of the class) through their paces for 4 years and these kids all end up with SATs scores above 1450. They don't take million dollar review courses. They learn over time, n school thanks to a genuinely rigorous curriculum. Not the DCPS bullsh$%T. I've had
kids in both environments (DCPS and top DC private) and the education is world's apart.
Private schools cherry pick their minorities. Those kids would have had high SAT scores regardless of where they went to school. To me Banneker's scores reflect the student population which is good for DCPS, but technically average. Still we are not comparing to a private school, which would bring up a lot of other issues, but to public schools in DC. In that context, Banneker looks like a pretty good option. As to those who are shocked that someone with an average SAT score could go to medical school, that is completely ridiculous. Maybe that child bloomed in college, or the test scores we're not indicative of his potential. Apparently grades are a much better metric to predict later success.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. My DH does horribly on standardized tests. 900 on the SAT, yet graduated from an excellent private high school with a 3.9 GPA. He was offered a full ride to college based on merit. Majored in chemistry. Graduated at the top of his class and was offered a full ride to med school. The SAT says NOTHING about future college performance or future success.
Your DH is an extreme outlier.
FYI
The odd teenager is always going to freeze up on standardized tests, even if they could answer most of the questions correctly in a low-pressure setting. Colleges know this, helping explain why the Test Optional movement is steadily gaining ground nationally.
I'm just not buying that the SAT says "nothing" about future college performance, because the test just isn't difficult for a HS student who's well read and did OK in MS or HS algebra and geometry. SATs are pitched at an 8th or 9th grade level for strong students who aren't geniuses or prodigies.
If high SAT scores were out of reach for cohorts of the best-prepped low-SES minority students, there's no way that average scores at the 9 NYC magnet test-in high schools, where at-risk/FARMs students are strongly represented, would be 1200+. What's obviously happening at Banneker, and Eastern, Dunbar, Ballou, Anacostia, is that the the most able low SES students in the system seldom get the essential support/prep they need to score high.
The fact that the depressing status quo works for our politicians, ed leaders, and the bleeding hearts and apologists for DCPS' failings on this thread is shameful.
Agree 100% with this. Top privates and magnet schools have many minority students from poor backgrounds who do exceedingly well on the SAT. Kids are not doing well on the SAT from Banneker because the education is a joke. The SAT isn't rocket science. It's basic reading and math at the geometry level or below.
Sidwell, GDS, STA etc put many poor minority kids (and the rest of the class) through their paces for 4 years and these kids all end up with SATs scores above 1450. They don't take million dollar review courses. They learn over time, n school thanks to a genuinely rigorous curriculum. Not the DCPS bullsh$%T. I've had
kids in both environments (DCPS and top DC private) and the education is world's apart.
Anonymous wrote:No great challenge to rebel against any particular system when coming from a privileged background.
In this country, the reality is that the sky's practically the limit in college admissions for low SES minority students with SAT scores of 1400-1600, and scores of 4 or 5 on multiple AP exams. With such scores, a poor minority kid will be recruited by multiple elite colleges offering great financial aid, even if their grades, recommendations and extra-curriculars don't knock it out of the park.
I went to MIT on the strength of my standardized test scores, although my family had qualified for free school meals since I was a little kid. MIT covered almost all of my college costs. Unlike Bannker students, I was very fortunate to be taught, and raised, by adults determined not only to help me get a great education, but to help me score high on the PSAT, SAT and AP tests.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DH is not an “extreme outlier”. He is a typical very successful black adult from difficult early circumstances. Many students at HBCUs fit his profile. Just because you are not aware of them means nothing to me. Just opening your shallow eyes to things you clearly know little about. White/Asian people put so much focus on the SAT. It really is useless, but continue to do you.
It's good that he did well in HS and the GPA is indicative of success in college. But a terrible SAT score is not something to wave away or be proud of. Something was missed in his education. Maybe he knows what it is, since you don't seem to know.
What is this trash. He went to med school, he passed the boards, he is a doctor, he shouldn't spend even one moment feeling ashamed of his SAT score, which was clearly NOT and indicator of anything.
Is it useful to have a high SAT score? Yes. Is it teachable? Yes! Are there high IQ people who will effortlessly do well and then totally rebel against systems? Yes, many, bc those two things go together. Will there be people who end up being extremely successful with low SAT scores? Yes, many!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DH is not an “extreme outlier”. He is a typical very successful black adult from difficult early circumstances. Many students at HBCUs fit his profile. Just because you are not aware of them means nothing to me. Just opening your shallow eyes to things you clearly know little about. White/Asian people put so much focus on the SAT. It really is useless, but continue to do you.
It's good that he did well in HS and the GPA is indicative of success in college. But a terrible SAT score is not something to wave away or be proud of. Something was missed in his education. Maybe he knows what it is, since you don't seem to know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. My DH does horribly on standardized tests. 900 on the SAT, yet graduated from an excellent private high school with a 3.9 GPA. He was offered a full ride to college based on merit. Majored in chemistry. Graduated at the top of his class and was offered a full ride to med school. The SAT says NOTHING about future college performance or future success.
Your DH is an extreme outlier.
FYI
The odd teenager is always going to freeze up on standardized tests, even if they could answer most of the questions correctly in a low-pressure setting. Colleges know this, helping explain why the Test Optional movement is steadily gaining ground nationally.
I'm just not buying that the SAT says "nothing" about future college performance, because the test just isn't difficult for a HS student who's well read and did OK in MS or HS algebra and geometry. SATs are pitched at an 8th or 9th grade level for strong students who aren't geniuses or prodigies.
If high SAT scores were out of reach for cohorts of the best-prepped low-SES minority students, there's no way that average scores at the 9 NYC magnet test-in high schools, where at-risk/FARMs students are strongly represented, would be 1200+. What's obviously happening at Banneker, and Eastern, Dunbar, Ballou, Anacostia, is that the the most able low SES students in the system seldom get the essential support/prep they need to score high.
The fact that the depressing status quo works for our politicians, ed leaders, and the bleeding hearts and apologists for DCPS' failings on this thread is shameful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. My DH does horribly on standardized tests. 900 on the SAT, yet graduated from an excellent private high school with a 3.9 GPA. He was offered a full ride to college based on merit. Majored in chemistry. Graduated at the top of his class and was offered a full ride to med school. The SAT says NOTHING about future college performance or future success.
What medical school offers full rides? I've literally never heard of this and I work in the field. Are you talking about financial aid?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. My DH does horribly on standardized tests. 900 on the SAT, yet graduated from an excellent private high school with a 3.9 GPA. He was offered a full ride to college based on merit. Majored in chemistry. Graduated at the top of his class and was offered a full ride to med school. The SAT says NOTHING about future college performance or future success.
What medical school offers full rides? I've literally never heard of this and I work in the field. Are you talking about financial aid?
Anonymous wrote:DH is not an “extreme outlier”. He is a typical very successful black adult from difficult early circumstances. Many students at HBCUs fit his profile. Just because you are not aware of them means nothing to me. Just opening your shallow eyes to things you clearly know little about. White/Asian people put so much focus on the SAT. It really is useless, but continue to do you.
Anonymous wrote:NP. My DH does horribly on standardized tests. 900 on the SAT, yet graduated from an excellent private high school with a 3.9 GPA. He was offered a full ride to college based on merit. Majored in chemistry. Graduated at the top of his class and was offered a full ride to med school. The SAT says NOTHING about future college performance or future success.