Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No - the solution is to have more collaboration between TJ and other schools, which will now start happening because the construction and labs are completed. Anyone with Middle School or High School students should check out the summer programs in STEM.
The academic summer school at TJ is for TJ students only.
There are STEM summer programs for non TJ students.
Anonymous wrote:Contact the partnership fund and get more lab equipment. There should not be shortages - and the funding for equipment is there through donated funds.
School board can't stop cheating just as it can't stop drug problems or gangs or assaults at other schools. Cheating goes on everywhere but it's just about the only discipline issue at TJ. Not necessarily the same at other schools where cheating is happening but other issues are more pressing to address.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No - the solution is to have more collaboration between TJ and other schools, which will now start happening because the construction and labs are completed. Anyone with Middle School or High School students should check out the summer programs in STEM.
The academic summer school at TJ is for TJ students only.
Anonymous wrote:No - the solution is to have more collaboration between TJ and other schools, which will now start happening because the construction and labs are completed. Anyone with Middle School or High School students should check out the summer programs in STEM.
Anonymous wrote:It is just so obvious from these posts that the solution is to convert TJ back into a regular school and de-escalate the AAP and magnet-driven culture at TJ. TJ itself is like a lab experiment designed to reveal how cut-throat and competitive parents and students can be. We've seen the results and now we can write up the conclusions and move on to trying something less corrosive that attracts fewer obsessive types and produces fewer cheaters.
Anonymous wrote:It makes me so sad and angry to read that so much cheating is going on at TJ. I have a rising 9th grader going to TJ. We need to do something about it. Complaining about it on this board is not going to help. Go to school board meetings and demand a change.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are there really businesses that sell TJ test questions? If so, that's insane!
They do. Because parents like the one on this board defending the practice will pay for them.
And understand that TJ is VERY VERY clear that getting test questions (prior year or current year) or providing test questions (ditto) is an integrity violation, unless the teacher okays it. This is not a grey area. It comes under the heading of "obtaining an unfair advantage/ aiding and abetting dishonesty" as TJ interprets it. It is defined as cheating by TJ. Again, unless the teacher or department sign off. Which is where, "ask the teacher if you have any doubt" comes in. I tell my kid to email the teacher about honor code questions, so the response is in writing and there can be no misunderstanding.
And if the parents are somehow confused on this point (they shouldn't be) their kids are not. Because they have been told repeatedly. But, many parents punish anything below an A, and push the kids to accelerate beyond what they are ready for. So kids feel like they have no choice. And parents insist their kids do this because that's what they did in India, or they don't care if it's cheating because it shouldn't be in their opinion, or Ivy League at any cost or the lazy white kids should be willing to cheat too. And if their kid is caught, they fight the kid getting a zero or getting any punishment-- like the nutty "downward spiral" mom upthread.
Which why the increasing numbers of Asian kids at TJ. upset people. Not because people care is the kids are black, brown, blue or purple. But because it makes a high pressure situation toxic. There are kids blatantly, openly, standing in the hall cheating and kids really pissed off that a subset of their peers cheat-- especially since many of the classes are curved. My kid has had lab reports stolen and kids in his class slow walk lab equipment that everyone needs to share so that some kids can't finish in time. It's creates anxiety, anger, and resentment. If TJ wants to still be viable in 5 years, they have to get serious about addressing it. Otherwise, it's only a matter of time it reaches a tipping point and a TJ diploma is worth nothing, because colleges know TJ kids are cheaters. And TJ kids come into college communities and continue this and cause problems.
It's time to start expelling kids. Parents will get the message really fast and cut it out. And I do think it is largely parent driven, not kid driven.
Wow, are you serious? Is it such a competiive environment? I have been told that kids are very supportive of each other. Has your son talked to his lab teachers about not having the equipment to finish his work?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are there really businesses that sell TJ test questions? If so, that's insane!
They do. Because parents like the one on this board defending the practice will pay for them.
And understand that TJ is VERY VERY clear that getting test questions (prior year or current year) or providing test questions (ditto) is an integrity violation, unless the teacher okays it. This is not a grey area. It comes under the heading of "obtaining an unfair advantage/ aiding and abetting dishonesty" as TJ interprets it. It is defined as cheating by TJ. Again, unless the teacher or department sign off. Which is where, "ask the teacher if you have any doubt" comes in. I tell my kid to email the teacher about honor code questions, so the response is in writing and there can be no misunderstanding.
And if the parents are somehow confused on this point (they shouldn't be) their kids are not. Because they have been told repeatedly. But, many parents punish anything below an A, and push the kids to accelerate beyond what they are ready for. So kids feel like they have no choice. And parents insist their kids do this because that's what they did in India, or they don't care if it's cheating because it shouldn't be in their opinion, or Ivy League at any cost or the lazy white kids should be willing to cheat too. And if their kid is caught, they fight the kid getting a zero or getting any punishment-- like the nutty "downward spiral" mom upthread.
Which why the increasing numbers of Asian kids at TJ. upset people. Not because people care is the kids are black, brown, blue or purple. But because it makes a high pressure situation toxic. There are kids blatantly, openly, standing in the hall cheating and kids really pissed off that a subset of their peers cheat-- especially since many of the classes are curved. My kid has had lab reports stolen and kids in his class slow walk lab equipment that everyone needs to share so that some kids can't finish in time. It's creates anxiety, anger, and resentment. If TJ wants to still be viable in 5 years, they have to get serious about addressing it. Otherwise, it's only a matter of time it reaches a tipping point and a TJ diploma is worth nothing, because colleges know TJ kids are cheaters. And TJ kids come into college communities and continue this and cause problems.
It's time to start expelling kids. Parents will get the message really fast and cut it out. And I do think it is largely parent driven, not kid driven.
Anonymous wrote:Are there really businesses that sell TJ test questions? If so, that's insane!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have any teachers come out and told kids they don't want them to study from old tests and that constitute cheating?
From my time in a professional college, we (white, asian, blacks, basically everybody) have studied old tests as a way to pinpoint what we need to work on. It wasn't a big deal as everybody has access to old tests.
One TJ teacher in a STEM subject has told me that he has done this, and also warned his classes that they should not be memorizing questions and repeating them to outside businesses that collect test questions. He did this going back a number of years, so this is not something new.