Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^ by environment, I primarily mean an extensive network of support for low-income families
What extensive network does NYC have?
The problem with FCPS providing support for per kids is that they are trying to achieve equal results not equal ability. And besides, they don't really care about income, just skin color.
They could have artificially achieved income diversity by explicitly preferencing income (which they did), they didn't have to get rid of the test for that. But they could not explicitly preference race and so they got rid of the test because objective testing is an obstacle to racial diversity.
They got rid of the test because wealthy people were getting an additional unfair advantage by prepping.
They had already changed the test to prevent this multiple times. But test prep companies continued to “crack” the test.
That's silly. We were there, we saw the board taking about racial diversity throughout the entire process. The backdrop of BLM let them push it through but it was all about race. You know it. I know it. Everyone knows it. If wealth determined how well you did on these tests why would Stuyvesant be 50% farm? How did TJ go from majority white to majority Asian?
Is this a serious question? Because the answer is wealthy Indian families concentrated in Loudoun and western Fairfax. They’re by FAR the wealthiest demographic in Northern Virginia.
GTFOH.
Of the 500 wealthiest family's in northern Virginia, they are overwhelmingly white. There may be a concentration of affluent Indian families in Loudon but they are not the wealthiest people in Fairfax. Not even close.
And even if they were, of the 500 spots at TJ under the old system, Loudon county got ~70 spots. The soft in demographics at TJ is because Asians showed up. That is what is causing the distribution that people want to counter.
There wasn't any political will to do anything when TJ was overwhelmingly white, that just seemed natural. Things didn't seem off until Asians started to crowd out white kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And parent were willing to spend big bucks to give their kids a leg up in admissions:
$2120
https://plcprep.com/1-on-1_tutoring.php
$200-300 per hour
https://www.principiatutors.com/our-pricing
$625
https://fairfaxcollegiate.com/test-prep/tjhsst-prep
$1000+ including practice tests
https://web.archive.org/web/20190411164031/http://katedalby.com/tj-admissions-prep/
$800 self paced
$2400 small group
https://www.tjtestprep.com/
$1950
https://www.principiatutors.com/tj-sps-pse-prep
$6985+ signature program that runs over two years “pass any test for admission into specialized programs like AOS/AET and TJ”
https://tinyurl.com/tjtestprepoptions
that’s nice, dear
YouTube free SAT prep:
- free
FCPS SAT prep resources
- free
High school college admissions center SAT prep resources
- free
Public library SAT prep guides
- free
Etc.
That's why they changed to a test that didn't have free trying available in the hopes that kids would not be able to study for the test. They STILL couldn't get the racial profile they desired so they just got rid of the test and things got a lot easier. Until kids started failing.
It worked for a year until the test prep companies caught up. Class of 2022 was significantly more diverse and performed outstandingly well.
If by more diverse, you mean more white, then yes the class of 2022 was more diverse. The two groups that saw increased admissions were Hispanic (went from 8 to 23) and white (went from 87 to 111). These changes always seem to help the white kids the most.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There’s this strange implication that “wealth” is somehow separate from ability. And we are really just talking MC/UMC here. But it’s true that intelligence is a heritable trait. And it takes a bit of intelligence and hard work to be MC/UMC. This is no secret.
Sorry but people with money aren’t just a bunch of idiots with inheritances. And there aren’t a whole bunch of poor geniuses.
Kids who were admitted under the old TJ admissions process were mostly not prodigies. Plop those same kids into economically-disadvantaged families at birth and it's very unlikely that most would still end up at TJ.
And yet you have schools like stuyvesant, bronx science and brooklyn tech where most of the students are in fact from poor families.
NYC has a different admissions environment/process.
For TJ, less than 1% of the class of 2024 came from economically-disadvantaged families.
Yes, in NYC admissions is based purely on an admissions test.
They don't care that you can transcribe the compelling prepared essay about the the summer you spent at a robotics camp that ignited your passion for stem.
And frankly the FARM percentage is not really relevant. TJ is not an anti-poverty program.
If poor kids are not being prepared, then your problem is with to the people who are supposed to be preparing them, not the people that are pointing out that they are not prepared.
TJ serves the whole community, not just the families who have the means to game the system.
It's supposed to serve the smart kids regardless of race or income.
TJ used to have an average SAT score of 1520. What do you think it was for the class of 2025?
Given that the % ED has gone up 800% I’m guessing it will go down some.
SAT scores are correlated with wealth.
SAT scores are correlated to cognitive ability and cognitive ability is correlated to wealth.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^ by environment, I primarily mean an extensive network of support for low-income families
What extensive network does NYC have?
The problem with FCPS providing support for per kids is that they are trying to achieve equal results not equal ability. And besides, they don't really care about income, just skin color.
They could have artificially achieved income diversity by explicitly preferencing income (which they did), they didn't have to get rid of the test for that. But they could not explicitly preference race and so they got rid of the test because objective testing is an obstacle to racial diversity.
They got rid of the test because wealthy people were getting an additional unfair advantage by prepping.
They had already changed the test to prevent this multiple times. But test prep companies continued to “crack” the test.
That's silly. We were there, we saw the board taking about racial diversity throughout the entire process. The backdrop of BLM let them push it through but it was all about race. You know it. I know it. Everyone knows it. If wealth determined how well you did on these tests why would Stuyvesant be 50% farm? How did TJ go from majority white to majority Asian?
Is this a serious question? Because the answer is wealthy Indian families concentrated in Loudoun and western Fairfax. They’re by FAR the wealthiest demographic in Northern Virginia.
GTFOH.
Of the 500 wealthiest family's in northern Virginia, they are overwhelmingly white. There may be a concentration of affluent Indian families in Loudon but they are not the wealthiest people in Fairfax. Not even close.
And even if they were, of the 500 spots at TJ under the old system, Loudon county got ~70 spots. The soft in demographics at TJ is because Asians showed up. That is what is causing the distribution that people want to counter.
There wasn't any political will to do anything when TJ was overwhelmingly white, that just seemed natural. Things didn't seem off until Asians started to crowd out white kids.
FALSE. The community has been concerned about test prep for decades…
2001:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/local/2001/12/01/outsmarting-the-competition-into-thomas-jefferson-high/3f547eb4-a62d-439e-adbb-c409403deea6/
“attended a private learning center in Burke for test practice and admissions counseling -- even advice on elementary school extracurricular activities. “
"Families go through incredible behavior just to try to get their kids into Jefferson by moving into a particular area or renting a town house near Longfellow [Middle School] or others that they think will give them an edge."
“The frenzy highlights a current districtwide controversy about the admission process. Domenech wants to increase the number of students attending Jefferson from less affluent areas of the county”
For the first time, applicants who registered to take the test this year were given a 16-page booklet with test-taking strategies and sample questions.
"We knew that kids were getting help," said admissions coordinator Christel G. Payne, "and it just wasn't fair that a great deal knew what they were facing when they went in on Saturday morning and others would go in cold with no idea what they would be looking at."
MCPS: “Eileen Steinkraus, the magnet coordinator, said applicants used to take the Preliminary SAT, but so many students studied for the test that they abolished it four years ago and had a testing service develop a test for them.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^ by environment, I primarily mean an extensive network of support for low-income families
What extensive network does NYC have?
The problem with FCPS providing support for per kids is that they are trying to achieve equal results not equal ability. And besides, they don't really care about income, just skin color.
They could have artificially achieved income diversity by explicitly preferencing income (which they did), they didn't have to get rid of the test for that. But they could not explicitly preference race and so they got rid of the test because objective testing is an obstacle to racial diversity.
They got rid of the test because wealthy people were getting an additional unfair advantage by prepping.
They had already changed the test to prevent this multiple times. But test prep companies continued to “crack” the test.
That's silly. We were there, we saw the board taking about racial diversity throughout the entire process. The backdrop of BLM let them push it through but it was all about race. You know it. I know it. Everyone knows it. If wealth determined how well you did on these tests why would Stuyvesant be 50% farm? How did TJ go from majority white to majority Asian?
Is this a serious question? Because the answer is wealthy Indian families concentrated in Loudoun and western Fairfax. They’re by FAR the wealthiest demographic in Northern Virginia.
GTFOH.
Of the 500 wealthiest family's in northern Virginia, they are overwhelmingly white. There may be a concentration of affluent Indian families in Loudon but they are not the wealthiest people in Fairfax. Not even close.
And even if they were, of the 500 spots at TJ under the old system, Loudon county got ~70 spots. The soft in demographics at TJ is because Asians showed up. That is what is causing the distribution that people want to counter.
There wasn't any political will to do anything when TJ was overwhelmingly white, that just seemed natural. Things didn't seem off until Asians started to crowd out white kids.
FALSE. The community has been concerned about test prep for decades…
2001:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/local/2001/12/01/outsmarting-the-competition-into-thomas-jefferson-high/3f547eb4-a62d-439e-adbb-c409403deea6/
“attended a private learning center in Burke for test practice and admissions counseling -- even advice on elementary school extracurricular activities. “
"Families go through incredible behavior just to try to get their kids into Jefferson by moving into a particular area or renting a town house near Longfellow [Middle School] or others that they think will give them an edge."
“The frenzy highlights a current districtwide controversy about the admission process. Domenech wants to increase the number of students attending Jefferson from less affluent areas of the county”
For the first time, applicants who registered to take the test this year were given a 16-page booklet with test-taking strategies and sample questions.
"We knew that kids were getting help," said admissions coordinator Christel G. Payne, "and it just wasn't fair that a great deal knew what they were facing when they went in on Saturday morning and others would go in cold with no idea what they would be looking at."
MCPS: “Eileen Steinkraus, the magnet coordinator, said applicants used to take the Preliminary SAT, but so many students studied for the test that they abolished it four years ago and had a testing service develop a test for them.”
Pfft.
I'm sure there were a lot of concerns. But, just like there were a lot of reasons for the civil war but really one reason, the primary driver of the admissions change was racial diversity. Nobody that was around 5 years ago would have said test prep was driving the change more than racial concerns
The answer to test prep is more transparency and access not hiding the ball or getting rid of the score sheet. There is a ton of prep available for the PSAT and a ton of test prep available for the SHSAT.
The problem is that you still end up with the same Asian problem. If only there was some way to get the Asians to study less, we wouldn't have any of these issues.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There’s this strange implication that “wealth” is somehow separate from ability. And we are really just talking MC/UMC here. But it’s true that intelligence is a heritable trait. And it takes a bit of intelligence and hard work to be MC/UMC. This is no secret.
Sorry but people with money aren’t just a bunch of idiots with inheritances. And there aren’t a whole bunch of poor geniuses.
Kids who were admitted under the old TJ admissions process were mostly not prodigies. Plop those same kids into economically-disadvantaged families at birth and it's very unlikely that most would still end up at TJ.
And yet you have schools like stuyvesant, bronx science and brooklyn tech where most of the students are in fact from poor families.
NYC has a different admissions environment/process.
For TJ, less than 1% of the class of 2024 came from economically-disadvantaged families.
Yes, in NYC admissions is based purely on an admissions test.
They don't care that you can transcribe the compelling prepared essay about the the summer you spent at a robotics camp that ignited your passion for stem.
And frankly the FARM percentage is not really relevant. TJ is not an anti-poverty program.
If poor kids are not being prepared, then your problem is with to the people who are supposed to be preparing them, not the people that are pointing out that they are not prepared.
TJ serves the whole community, not just the families who have the means to game the system.
It's supposed to serve the smart kids regardless of race or income.
TJ used to have an average SAT score of 1520. What do you think it was for the class of 2025?
Given that the % ED has gone up 800% I’m guessing it will go down some.
SAT scores are correlated with wealth.
SAT scores are correlated to cognitive ability and cognitive ability is correlated to wealth.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^ by environment, I primarily mean an extensive network of support for low-income families
What extensive network does NYC have?
The problem with FCPS providing support for per kids is that they are trying to achieve equal results not equal ability. And besides, they don't really care about income, just skin color.
They could have artificially achieved income diversity by explicitly preferencing income (which they did), they didn't have to get rid of the test for that. But they could not explicitly preference race and so they got rid of the test because objective testing is an obstacle to racial diversity.
They got rid of the test because wealthy people were getting an additional unfair advantage by prepping.
They had already changed the test to prevent this multiple times. But test prep companies continued to “crack” the test.
That's silly. We were there, we saw the board taking about racial diversity throughout the entire process. The backdrop of BLM let them push it through but it was all about race. You know it. I know it. Everyone knows it. If wealth determined how well you did on these tests why would Stuyvesant be 50% farm? How did TJ go from majority white to majority Asian?
Is this a serious question? Because the answer is wealthy Indian families concentrated in Loudoun and western Fairfax. They’re by FAR the wealthiest demographic in Northern Virginia.
GTFOH.
Of the 500 wealthiest family's in northern Virginia, they are overwhelmingly white. There may be a concentration of affluent Indian families in Loudon but they are not the wealthiest people in Fairfax. Not even close.
And even if they were, of the 500 spots at TJ under the old system, Loudon county got ~70 spots. The soft in demographics at TJ is because Asians showed up. That is what is causing the distribution that people want to counter.
There wasn't any political will to do anything when TJ was overwhelmingly white, that just seemed natural. Things didn't seem off until Asians started to crowd out white kids.
FALSE. The community has been concerned about test prep for decades…
2001:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/local/2001/12/01/outsmarting-the-competition-into-thomas-jefferson-high/3f547eb4-a62d-439e-adbb-c409403deea6/
“attended a private learning center in Burke for test practice and admissions counseling -- even advice on elementary school extracurricular activities. “
"Families go through incredible behavior just to try to get their kids into Jefferson by moving into a particular area or renting a town house near Longfellow [Middle School] or others that they think will give them an edge."
“The frenzy highlights a current districtwide controversy about the admission process. Domenech wants to increase the number of students attending Jefferson from less affluent areas of the county”
For the first time, applicants who registered to take the test this year were given a 16-page booklet with test-taking strategies and sample questions.
"We knew that kids were getting help," said admissions coordinator Christel G. Payne, "and it just wasn't fair that a great deal knew what they were facing when they went in on Saturday morning and others would go in cold with no idea what they would be looking at."
MCPS: “Eileen Steinkraus, the magnet coordinator, said applicants used to take the Preliminary SAT, but so many students studied for the test that they abolished it four years ago and had a testing service develop a test for them.”
Pfft.
I'm sure there were a lot of concerns. But, just like there were a lot of reasons for the civil war but really one reason, the primary driver of the admissions change was racial diversity. Nobody that was around 5 years ago would have said test prep was driving the change more than racial concerns
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^ by environment, I primarily mean an extensive network of support for low-income families
What extensive network does NYC have?
The problem with FCPS providing support for per kids is that they are trying to achieve equal results not equal ability. And besides, they don't really care about income, just skin color.
They could have artificially achieved income diversity by explicitly preferencing income (which they did), they didn't have to get rid of the test for that. But they could not explicitly preference race and so they got rid of the test because objective testing is an obstacle to racial diversity.
They got rid of the test because wealthy people were getting an additional unfair advantage by prepping.
They had already changed the test to prevent this multiple times. But test prep companies continued to “crack” the test.
That's silly. We were there, we saw the board taking about racial diversity throughout the entire process. The backdrop of BLM let them push it through but it was all about race. You know it. I know it. Everyone knows it. If wealth determined how well you did on these tests why would Stuyvesant be 50% farm? How did TJ go from majority white to majority Asian?
Is this a serious question? Because the answer is wealthy Indian families concentrated in Loudoun and western Fairfax. They’re by FAR the wealthiest demographic in Northern Virginia.
GTFOH.
Of the 500 wealthiest family's in northern Virginia, they are overwhelmingly white. There may be a concentration of affluent Indian families in Loudon but they are not the wealthiest people in Fairfax. Not even close.
And even if they were, of the 500 spots at TJ under the old system, Loudon county got ~70 spots. The soft in demographics at TJ is because Asians showed up. That is what is causing the distribution that people want to counter.
There wasn't any political will to do anything when TJ was overwhelmingly white, that just seemed natural. Things didn't seem off until Asians started to crowd out white kids.
FALSE. The community has been concerned about test prep for decades…
2001:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/local/2001/12/01/outsmarting-the-competition-into-thomas-jefferson-high/3f547eb4-a62d-439e-adbb-c409403deea6/
“attended a private learning center in Burke for test practice and admissions counseling -- even advice on elementary school extracurricular activities. “
"Families go through incredible behavior just to try to get their kids into Jefferson by moving into a particular area or renting a town house near Longfellow [Middle School] or others that they think will give them an edge."
“The frenzy highlights a current districtwide controversy about the admission process. Domenech wants to increase the number of students attending Jefferson from less affluent areas of the county”
For the first time, applicants who registered to take the test this year were given a 16-page booklet with test-taking strategies and sample questions.
"We knew that kids were getting help," said admissions coordinator Christel G. Payne, "and it just wasn't fair that a great deal knew what they were facing when they went in on Saturday morning and others would go in cold with no idea what they would be looking at."
MCPS: “Eileen Steinkraus, the magnet coordinator, said applicants used to take the Preliminary SAT, but so many students studied for the test that they abolished it four years ago and had a testing service develop a test for them.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^ by environment, I primarily mean an extensive network of support for low-income families
What extensive network does NYC have?
The problem with FCPS providing support for per kids is that they are trying to achieve equal results not equal ability. And besides, they don't really care about income, just skin color.
They could have artificially achieved income diversity by explicitly preferencing income (which they did), they didn't have to get rid of the test for that. But they could not explicitly preference race and so they got rid of the test because objective testing is an obstacle to racial diversity.
They got rid of the test because wealthy people were getting an additional unfair advantage by prepping.
They had already changed the test to prevent this multiple times. But test prep companies continued to “crack” the test.
That's silly. We were there, we saw the board taking about racial diversity throughout the entire process. The backdrop of BLM let them push it through but it was all about race. You know it. I know it. Everyone knows it. If wealth determined how well you did on these tests why would Stuyvesant be 50% farm? How did TJ go from majority white to majority Asian?
Is this a serious question? Because the answer is wealthy Indian families concentrated in Loudoun and western Fairfax. They’re by FAR the wealthiest demographic in Northern Virginia.
GTFOH.
Of the 500 wealthiest family's in northern Virginia, they are overwhelmingly white. There may be a concentration of affluent Indian families in Loudon but they are not the wealthiest people in Fairfax. Not even close.
And even if they were, of the 500 spots at TJ under the old system, Loudon county got ~70 spots. The soft in demographics at TJ is because Asians showed up. That is what is causing the distribution that people want to counter.
There wasn't any political will to do anything when TJ was overwhelmingly white, that just seemed natural. Things didn't seem off until Asians started to crowd out white kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The community has been concerned about test prep for decades…
2001:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/local/2001/12/01/outsmarting-the-competition-into-thomas-jefferson-high/3f547eb4-a62d-439e-adbb-c409403deea6/
“attended a private learning center in Burke for test practice and admissions counseling -- even advice on elementary school extracurricular activities. “
"Families go through incredible behavior just to try to get their kids into Jefferson by moving into a particular area or renting a town house near Longfellow [Middle School] or others that they think will give them an edge."
“The frenzy highlights a current districtwide controversy about the admission process. Domenech wants to increase the number of students attending Jefferson from less affluent areas of the county”
For the first time, applicants who registered to take the test this year were given a 16-page booklet with test-taking strategies and sample questions.
"We knew that kids were getting help," said admissions coordinator Christel G. Payne, "and it just wasn't fair that a great deal knew what they were facing when they went in on Saturday morning and others would go in cold with no idea what they would be looking at."
MCPS: “Eileen Steinkraus, the magnet coordinator, said applicants used to take the Preliminary SAT, but so many students studied for the test that they abolished it four years ago and had a testing service develop a test for them.”
Go back to the videos of the board meetings at the time they speed this new admissions system. It was all about the benefits of racial diversity and blm
Diversity of HHI has always been a concern.
As has test prepping.
There were multiple reasons.
Just as there were multiple reasons the confederacy fought the civil war but one reason Trumped all others.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^ by environment, I primarily mean an extensive network of support for low-income families
What extensive network does NYC have?
The problem with FCPS providing support for per kids is that they are trying to achieve equal results not equal ability. And besides, they don't really care about income, just skin color.
They could have artificially achieved income diversity by explicitly preferencing income (which they did), they didn't have to get rid of the test for that. But they could not explicitly preference race and so they got rid of the test because objective testing is an obstacle to racial diversity.
They got rid of the test because wealthy people were getting an additional unfair advantage by prepping.
They had already changed the test to prevent this multiple times. But test prep companies continued to “crack” the test.
That's silly. We were there, we saw the board taking about racial diversity throughout the entire process. The backdrop of BLM let them push it through but it was all about race. You know it. I know it. Everyone knows it. If wealth determined how well you did on these tests why would Stuyvesant be 50% farm? How did TJ go from majority white to majority Asian?
Is this a serious question? Because the answer is wealthy Indian families concentrated in Loudoun and western Fairfax. They’re by FAR the wealthiest demographic in Northern Virginia.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The community has been concerned about test prep for decades…
2001:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/local/2001/12/01/outsmarting-the-competition-into-thomas-jefferson-high/3f547eb4-a62d-439e-adbb-c409403deea6/
“attended a private learning center in Burke for test practice and admissions counseling -- even advice on elementary school extracurricular activities. “
"Families go through incredible behavior just to try to get their kids into Jefferson by moving into a particular area or renting a town house near Longfellow [Middle School] or others that they think will give them an edge."
“The frenzy highlights a current districtwide controversy about the admission process. Domenech wants to increase the number of students attending Jefferson from less affluent areas of the county”
For the first time, applicants who registered to take the test this year were given a 16-page booklet with test-taking strategies and sample questions.
"We knew that kids were getting help," said admissions coordinator Christel G. Payne, "and it just wasn't fair that a great deal knew what they were facing when they went in on Saturday morning and others would go in cold with no idea what they would be looking at."
MCPS: “Eileen Steinkraus, the magnet coordinator, said applicants used to take the Preliminary SAT, but so many students studied for the test that they abolished it four years ago and had a testing service develop a test for them.”
Go back to the videos of the board meetings at the time they speed this new admissions system. It was all about the benefits of racial diversity and blm
Diversity of HHI has always been a concern.
As has test prepping.
There were multiple reasons.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There’s this strange implication that “wealth” is somehow separate from ability. And we are really just talking MC/UMC here. But it’s true that intelligence is a heritable trait. And it takes a bit of intelligence and hard work to be MC/UMC. This is no secret.
Sorry but people with money aren’t just a bunch of idiots with inheritances. And there aren’t a whole bunch of poor geniuses.
Kids who were admitted under the old TJ admissions process were mostly not prodigies. Plop those same kids into economically-disadvantaged families at birth and it's very unlikely that most would still end up at TJ.
And yet you have schools like stuyvesant, bronx science and brooklyn tech where most of the students are in fact from poor families.
NYC has a different admissions environment/process.
For TJ, less than 1% of the class of 2024 came from economically-disadvantaged families.
Yes, in NYC admissions is based purely on an admissions test.
They don't care that you can transcribe the compelling prepared essay about the the summer you spent at a robotics camp that ignited your passion for stem.
And frankly the FARM percentage is not really relevant. TJ is not an anti-poverty program.
If poor kids are not being prepared, then your problem is with to the people who are supposed to be preparing them, not the people that are pointing out that they are not prepared.
TJ serves the whole community, not just the families who have the means to game the system.
It's supposed to serve the smart kids regardless of race or income.
TJ used to have an average SAT score of 1520. What do you think it was for the class of 2025?
Given that the % ED has gone up 800% I’m guessing it will go down some.
SAT scores are correlated with wealth.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And parent were willing to spend big bucks to give their kids a leg up in admissions:
$2120
https://plcprep.com/1-on-1_tutoring.php
$200-300 per hour
https://www.principiatutors.com/our-pricing
$625
https://fairfaxcollegiate.com/test-prep/tjhsst-prep
$1000+ including practice tests
https://web.archive.org/web/20190411164031/http://katedalby.com/tj-admissions-prep/
$800 self paced
$2400 small group
https://www.tjtestprep.com/
$1950
https://www.principiatutors.com/tj-sps-pse-prep
$6985+ signature program that runs over two years “pass any test for admission into specialized programs like AOS/AET and TJ”
https://tinyurl.com/tjtestprepoptions
that’s nice, dear
YouTube free SAT prep:
- free
FCPS SAT prep resources
- free
High school college admissions center SAT prep resources
- free
Public library SAT prep guides
- free
Etc.
That's why they changed to a test that didn't have free trying available in the hopes that kids would not be able to study for the test. They STILL couldn't get the racial profile they desired so they just got rid of the test and things got a lot easier. Until kids started failing.
It worked for a year until the test prep companies caught up. Class of 2022 was significantly more diverse and performed outstandingly well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And parent were willing to spend big bucks to give their kids a leg up in admissions:
$2120
https://plcprep.com/1-on-1_tutoring.php
$200-300 per hour
https://www.principiatutors.com/our-pricing
$625
https://fairfaxcollegiate.com/test-prep/tjhsst-prep
$1000+ including practice tests
https://web.archive.org/web/20190411164031/http://katedalby.com/tj-admissions-prep/
$800 self paced
$2400 small group
https://www.tjtestprep.com/
$1950
https://www.principiatutors.com/tj-sps-pse-prep
$6985+ signature program that runs over two years “pass any test for admission into specialized programs like AOS/AET and TJ”
https://tinyurl.com/tjtestprepoptions
that’s nice, dear
YouTube free SAT prep:
- free
FCPS SAT prep resources
- free
High school college admissions center SAT prep resources
- free
Public library SAT prep guides
- free
Etc.
That's why they changed to a test that didn't have free trying available in the hopes that kids would not be able to study for the test. They STILL couldn't get the racial profile they desired so they just got rid of the test and things got a lot easier. Until kids started failing.