Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If my middle school aged kid had a choice between my alma mater Andover, GDS or Thomas Jefferson, I'd urge him to attend TJ. That's not possible because we live on the Maryland side, but I have no doubt TJ would be the easy top choice. This is based only on quality and not costs.
http://www.washingtonian.com/articles/work-education/education/success-factory-inside-americas-best-high-school/
Did Andover or TJ have any alums named as Rhodes Scholars this year?
Oh please, enough with the Rhodes kid. The GDS Rhodes scholar is a great kid, but he only attended GDS for a couple years. I honestly doubt if those two years changed his trajectory in any significant way. I'm sure GDS, TJ, Sidwell, St. Albans and Andover all have a few Rhodes scholars in their ranks over the years. It's a great honor, but it says more about the kid than the school he/she attended.
Anonymous wrote:Acceptance rates for some colleges 2005 vs. 2015, 2014, 2013
http://www.ivywise.com/admission_statistics.html
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is a psychological difference between schools that accept less than 10% of applicants and those that accept more. Most of the Ivies accept fewer than 10% -- I think Penn and Cornell just a tad higher. Some people just want to go to the most competitive school without regard to fit.
What nonsense. 10% is magical? Acceptance rates were higher in the past.

Anonymous wrote:Were the Sidwell 2015 stats acceptances or matriculations?
Anonymous wrote:There is a psychological difference between schools that accept less than 10% of applicants and those that accept more. Most of the Ivies accept fewer than 10% -- I think Penn and Cornell just a tad higher. Some people just want to go to the most competitive school without regard to fit.