Anonymous wrote:I went to a very selective college that takes a lot of kids from TJ.
The kids from TJ (And from Stuy and Bronx Science) were very well prepared because they already knew what it was like to be challenged and to be a small fish in a big pond.
One funny thing all my friends from TJ (and Stuy, etc.) told me was that they felt they had SO much more time in college, actually, because they didn't have to have a really long commute to and from school.![]()
Anonymous wrote:I went to a very selective college that takes a lot of kids from TJ.
The kids from TJ (And from Stuy and Bronx Science) were very well prepared because they already knew what it was like to be challenged and to be a small fish in a big pond.
One funny thing all my friends from TJ (and Stuy, etc.) told me was that they felt they had SO much more time in college, actually, because they didn't have to have a really long commute to and from school.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would have to agree that I believe college will be very easy after what my DC has done at TJ. The expectations on their work, the rigor, the time management really are hard for anyone to believe unless your DC has attended.
I do think that it is much harder for the superior stem kids to stand out at TJ because there are just so many amazing kids.
But when looking at the college list what's really the most impressive to me is what colleges are not on the list. Every school on there is a good school. Even the kids toward the bottom of the class are going to great colleges. No random colleges or community colleges I've never heard of.
Like every other HS, the vast majority go to match schools, the very top go to reach schools.
TJ has the best college acceptances and merit based scholarships of all the public high schools in the country.
Source?
NP. Start with Polaris List. Best admissions results public or private.
https://www.polarislist.com/
Well this is only for 2015-2017 and only included 3 schools
Of course TJ is good. Basically they take about 1/2 of the top 8% of the county. That is why it does so well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everyone applying to TJ knows that if getting into a top college is your number one priority, you may well be better off at your base school. The kids talk about this and accept it. Go to TJ because of the courses and the cohorts - take advantage of all that and you will be very glad you made that choice. - Parent of an average TJ student
Amen. Parent of a middle of the pack TJ kid who is very pleased with her kids match and even safety college options. And the one 2/3 of tuition merit offer (formal, in writing) he already got from one of the 3 safeties based on SATs and interview, before the application ever goes in. And I expect the second— Pitt— to look equally good when we hear in a month or two (app already in) If these school with these merit package is my kids best options, he’ll be fine. With a number of promising matches and a reach he will never get into upstanding. He also would have been fine for the base school. But the safeties are actively recruiting TJ in STEM.
Also, he loved TJ, especially one he could do more advanced electives junior year, met a lot of kids like him, got an amazing education, and will easily handle any academics any college he gets into can throw at him.
Pitt. LOL!
Anonymous wrote:Where did your kid have a 2/3 merit offer before applications even opened?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would have to agree that I believe college will be very easy after what my DC has done at TJ. The expectations on their work, the rigor, the time management really are hard for anyone to believe unless your DC has attended.
I do think that it is much harder for the superior stem kids to stand out at TJ because there are just so many amazing kids.
But when looking at the college list what's really the most impressive to me is what colleges are not on the list. Every school on there is a good school. Even the kids toward the bottom of the class are going to great colleges. No random colleges or community colleges I've never heard of.
Like every other HS, the vast majority go to match schools, the very top go to reach schools.
TJ has the best college acceptances and merit based scholarships of all the public high schools in the country.
Source?
NP. Start with Polaris List. Best admissions results public or private.
https://www.polarislist.com/
Well this is only for 2015-2017 and only included 3 schools
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would have to agree that I believe college will be very easy after what my DC has done at TJ. The expectations on their work, the rigor, the time management really are hard for anyone to believe unless your DC has attended.
I do think that it is much harder for the superior stem kids to stand out at TJ because there are just so many amazing kids.
But when looking at the college list what's really the most impressive to me is what colleges are not on the list. Every school on there is a good school. Even the kids toward the bottom of the class are going to great colleges. No random colleges or community colleges I've never heard of.
Like every other HS, the vast majority go to match schools, the very top go to reach schools.
TJ has the best college acceptances and merit based scholarships of all the public high schools in the country.
So?
Source?
NP. Start with Polaris List. Best admissions results public or private.
https://www.polarislist.com/
Well this is only for 2015-2017 and only included 3 schools
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would have to agree that I believe college will be very easy after what my DC has done at TJ. The expectations on their work, the rigor, the time management really are hard for anyone to believe unless your DC has attended.
I do think that it is much harder for the superior stem kids to stand out at TJ because there are just so many amazing kids.
But when looking at the college list what's really the most impressive to me is what colleges are not on the list. Every school on there is a good school. Even the kids toward the bottom of the class are going to great colleges. No random colleges or community colleges I've never heard of.
Like every other HS, the vast majority go to match schools, the very top go to reach schools.
TJ has the best college acceptances and merit based scholarships of all the public high schools in the country.
Source?
NP. Start with Polaris List. Best admissions results public or private.
https://www.polarislist.com/
Anonymous wrote:
I've heard it said that TJ grads have the highest cohort GPAs at schools like W&M and UVA. Can't verify that. If so, it could be because the kids are smart, but it could be that they are better prepared for the college academic environment than their counterparts from other schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everyone applying to TJ knows that if getting into a top college is your number one priority, you may well be better off at your base school. The kids talk about this and accept it. Go to TJ because of the courses and the cohorts - take advantage of all that and you will be very glad you made that choice. - Parent of an average TJ student
Amen. Parent of a middle of the pack TJ kid who is very pleased with her kids match and even safety college options. And the one 2/3 of tuition merit offer (formal, in writing) he already got from one of the 3 safeties based on SATs and interview, before the application ever goes in. And I expect the second— Pitt— to look equally good when we hear in a month or two (app already in) If these school with these merit package is my kids best options, he’ll be fine. With a number of promising matches and a reach he will never get into upstanding. He also would have been fine for the base school. But the safeties are actively recruiting TJ in STEM.
Also, he loved TJ, especially one he could do more advanced electives junior year, met a lot of kids like him, got an amazing education, and will easily handle any academics any college he gets into can throw at him.
Anonymous wrote:Everyone applying to TJ knows that if getting into a top college is your number one priority, you may well be better off at your base school. The kids talk about this and accept it. Go to TJ because of the courses and the cohorts - take advantage of all that and you will be very glad you made that choice. - Parent of an average TJ student
Anonymous wrote:Everyone applying to TJ knows that if getting into a top college is your number one priority, you may well be better off at your base school. The kids talk about this and accept it. Go to TJ because of the courses and the cohorts - take advantage of all that and you will be very glad you made that choice. - Parent of an average TJ student