Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here's a few more added.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Great schools rankings are as follows
Churchill-10
BCC-9
Poolesville-9
WJ-9
Wootton-9
Damascus-8
Quince Orchard-8
Whitman-8
Clarksburg-7
Northwest-7
Sherwood-7
Magruder-6
Montgomery Blair-6
Paint Branch-5
Rockville-5
Seneca Valley-4
Springbrook-4
Watkins Mill-4
Wheaton-4
GreatSchools rankings are meaningless drivel. This is a simple average that merely reflects an areas SES and has nothing to do with educational outcomes. It also fails to capture the racist nonsense and bullying that are ubiquitous at schools like Churchill.
Great Schools has a test scores component and an equity component that looks at performance by subgroup. It has flaws like any ranking system, but it's not accurate that it simply reflects an area's SES. But no ranking captures bullying...there's no way anyone would be able to measure that objectively across schools.![]()
Anonymous wrote:The Ws (excluding WJ) are best, followed by BCC. Fin.
Anonymous wrote:
Interesting ranking. I'm surprised that Wheaton is at the bottom below Kennedy and Gaithersburg. I guess the Wheaton booster needs to re-evaluate her recommendations.
Anonymous wrote:
Interesting ranking. I'm surprised that Wheaton is at the bottom below Kennedy and Gaithersburg. I guess the Wheaton booster needs to re-evaluate her recommendations.
If their kids are doing great at Wheaton, why would they need to re-evaluate it? Didn't Wheaton recently win a science competition?
If you want to base your ratings on something, at least do it by graduation rates. You can come up with your own tiers from here.
1. Walt Whitman High (97.9 percent)
2. Thomas S. Wootton High (97.8 percent)
3. Winston Churchill High (97.4 percent)
4. Poolesville High (96.2 percent)
5. Walter Johnson High (95.8 percent)
6. Quince Orchard High (95.6 percent)
7. Northwest High (94.95 percent)
8. Bethesda-Chevy Chase High (94.42 percent)
9. Damascus High (93.98 percent)
10. Sherwood High (93.89 percent)
11. Richard Montgomery High (92.24 percent)
12. Clarksburg High (91.52 percent)
13. Paint Branch High (90.55 percent)
14. James Hubert Blake High (90.21 percent)
15. Montgomery Blair High (86.21 percent)
16. Col. Zadok Magruder High (89.59 percent)
17. Springbrook High (87.83 percent)
18. Seneca Valley High (86.21 percent)
19. Rockville High (86.02 percent)
20. Watkins Mill High (84.5 percent)
21. Albert Einstein High (81.93 percent)
22. John F. Kennedy High (81.22 percent)
23. Northwood High (79.36 percent)
24. Gaithersburg High (77.39 percent)
25. Wheaton High (77.36 percent)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PPs can say what you want, no one is moving to a SV neighborhood so their kid can experience diversity, even though it’ll be (arguably) the nicest school in the county (bc it’s the newest).
People don’t like diversity or low income. But they like to pretend they do, then make an excuse about how they ended up in a good neighborhood “Well my parents bought this house in the 90’s and we wanted to save for a family soooo...”
???
Our household is in the top 2% of income earners, we have very healthy savings/investments, and we have chosen to stay in the Blair district primarily because we love this area's diversity. We are also very happy with the school options our kids have had.
Is this a joke? Blair’s has a magnet program. Completely different than moving to an SVHS neighborhood.
Are you sending your kid to Claire?
Why is that a joke? We are high earners and in the Blair district as well. We could really live anywhere, but plan to send our kids there too for many reasons.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^ why by graduation rates, which is also a reflection of SES.
A lot of things are based on SES. Better by graduation rates rather than basing it off of nothing as what the other previous posters have been doing. High graduation rates mean that there is a good number of kids who care about well, graduating.. which isn't a high bar in my opinion even so for kids from low SES. Schools that have low graduation rates (lower than the state average) would concern me big time.
So... do you think that by going to a different school your own child’s SES is going to change?
Is this a serious question? Please for the love of God, say no.
It was a sarcastic question. I’m so sick of arguments I read on here that going to school with anything more than 20% poor kids is somehow going to turn your otherwise upper middle class child into a poor dropout. It’s not true.
Similarly, choosing to take the metro rather than drive will not turn you into a homeless person, despite statistics that show homeless people are much more likely to take the metro than drive cars.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^ why by graduation rates, which is also a reflection of SES.
A lot of things are based on SES. Better by graduation rates rather than basing it off of nothing as what the other previous posters have been doing. High graduation rates mean that there is a good number of kids who care about well, graduating.. which isn't a high bar in my opinion even so for kids from low SES. Schools that have low graduation rates (lower than the state average) would concern me big time.
So... do you think that by going to a different school your own child’s SES is going to change?
Is this a serious question? Please for the love of God, say no.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PPs can say what you want, no one is moving to a SV neighborhood so their kid can experience diversity, even though it’ll be (arguably) the nicest school in the county (bc it’s the newest).
People don’t like diversity or low income. But they like to pretend they do, then make an excuse about how they ended up in a good neighborhood “Well my parents bought this house in the 90’s and we wanted to save for a family soooo...”
???
Our household is in the top 2% of income earners, we have very healthy savings/investments, and we have chosen to stay in the Blair district primarily because we love this area's diversity. We are also very happy with the school options our kids have had.
Is this a joke? Blair’s has a magnet program. Completely different than moving to an SVHS neighborhood.
Are you sending your kid to Claire?
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like if people are honest most folks are looking for the sweet spot of 20-40% FARMS
any lower and you get a distorted rich person view of the world and any higher the school begins to have serious issues