Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These accusations of cheating is just copium for people who can't admit that Asians (and to a lesser extent ask immigrants) are outperforming pretty much everyone else.
That's pure crap. And we're (E) Asian ethnicity (and are proud to be US citizens).
Most people don't have to point out they are citizens. But you do. Why?
We are the forever outsider. We have been since the beginning.
You understand that there is about a 95% chance your grandparents were not born in america.
Unless you are gen z, there is about a 90% chance your parents were not born in america.
There is a very high chance that you were brought up in a confucian culture at home that focused on education.
We are a community of immigrants and the children of immigrants.
And our cultural priorities leads to much better academic results.
Something like 10% of asians get a 1500+ on the SATs and 25% get above a 1400.
If you get above a 1400 on the SATs as an asian, you are 2 standard deviations above the mean for the general population at the 95th percentile but just an above average asian student at the 75th percentile.
https://satsuite.collegeboard.org/media/pdf/sat-percentile-ranks-gender-race-ethnicity.pdf
And despite all the propaganda from the C4TJ cultists TJ had one of the best college admission years in decades.
You STILL sound like Trump.
Underneath it all, you racists are all the same.
You need lies to support your other lies
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is a troll here on DCUM who loves to perpetuate this lie. She repeats it to support the false narrative that TJ only admitted students from exceptionally high SES families, who could afford to (as she put it) “buy the test answers.”
Her claim is not true. It was never true.
When challenged on this falsehood, she often asserts test-preparation courses equal “buying test answers.” But, by her twisted logic, anyone’s child who does an SAT prep session or even buys a test-prep book from Amazon, has somehow “purchased the answers to the upcoming SAT.”
Call this troll out when you encounter her lies here. I’ve tried reporting her, but she’s apparently still around. I’m uncertain why she harbors such hatred towards TJ or why she insists on repeatedly lying about TJ admissions.
Thou doth protest too much, methinks
People who say "methinks" don't
What kind of twat says "methinks"?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is a troll here on DCUM who loves to perpetuate this lie. She repeats it to support the false narrative that TJ only admitted students from exceptionally high SES families, who could afford to (as she put it) “buy the test answers.”
Her claim is not true. It was never true.
When challenged on this falsehood, she often asserts test-preparation courses equal “buying test answers.” But, by her twisted logic, anyone’s child who does an SAT prep session or even buys a test-prep book from Amazon, has somehow “purchased the answers to the upcoming SAT.”
Call this troll out when you encounter her lies here. I’ve tried reporting her, but she’s apparently still around. I’m uncertain why she harbors such hatred towards TJ or why she insists on repeatedly lying about TJ admissions.
Thou doth protest too much, methinks
Anonymous wrote:There is a troll here on DCUM who loves to perpetuate this lie. She repeats it to support the false narrative that TJ only admitted students from exceptionally high SES families, who could afford to (as she put it) “buy the test answers.”
Her claim is not true. It was never true.
When challenged on this falsehood, she often asserts test-preparation courses equal “buying test answers.” But, by her twisted logic, anyone’s child who does an SAT prep session or even buys a test-prep book from Amazon, has somehow “purchased the answers to the upcoming SAT.”
Call this troll out when you encounter her lies here. I’ve tried reporting her, but she’s apparently still around. I’m uncertain why she harbors such hatred towards TJ or why she insists on repeatedly lying about TJ admissions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These accusations of cheating is just copium for people who can't admit that Asians (and to a lesser extent ask immigrants) are outperforming pretty much everyone else.
That's pure crap. And we're (E) Asian ethnicity (and are proud to be US citizens).
Most people don't have to point out they are citizens. But you do. Why?
We are the forever outsider. We have been since the beginning.
You understand that there is about a 95% chance your grandparents were not born in america.
Unless you are gen z, there is about a 90% chance your parents were not born in america.
There is a very high chance that you were brought up in a confucian culture at home that focused on education.
We are a community of immigrants and the children of immigrants.
And our cultural priorities leads to much better academic results.
Something like 10% of asians get a 1500+ on the SATs and 25% get above a 1400.
If you get above a 1400 on the SATs as an asian, you are 2 standard deviations above the mean for the general population at the 95th percentile but just an above average asian student at the 75th percentile.
https://satsuite.collegeboard.org/media/pdf/sat-percentile-ranks-gender-race-ethnicity.pdf
And despite all the propaganda from the C4TJ cultists TJ had one of the best college admission years in decades.
Cite?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These accusations of cheating is just copium for people who can't admit that Asians (and to a lesser extent ask immigrants) are outperforming pretty much everyone else.
That's pure crap. And we're (E) Asian ethnicity (and are proud to be US citizens).
Most people don't have to point out they are citizens. But you do. Why?
We are the forever outsider. We have been since the beginning.
You understand that there is about a 95% chance your grandparents were not born in america.
Unless you are gen z, there is about a 90% chance your parents were not born in america.
There is a very high chance that you were brought up in a confucian culture at home that focused on education.
We are a community of immigrants and the children of immigrants.
And our cultural priorities leads to much better academic results.
Something like 10% of asians get a 1500+ on the SATs and 25% get above a 1400.
If you get above a 1400 on the SATs as an asian, you are 2 standard deviations above the mean for the general population at the 95th percentile but just an above average asian student at the 75th percentile.
https://satsuite.collegeboard.org/media/pdf/sat-percentile-ranks-gender-race-ethnicity.pdf
And despite all the propaganda from the C4TJ cultists TJ had one of the best college admission years in decades.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These accusations of cheating is just copium for people who can't admit that Asians (and to a lesser extent ask immigrants) are outperforming pretty much everyone else.
That's pure crap. And we're (E) Asian ethnicity (and are proud to be US citizens).
Most people don't have to point out they are citizens. But you do. Why?
We are the forever outsider. We have been since the beginning.
You understand that there is about a 95% chance your grandparents were not born in america.
Unless you are gen z, there is about a 90% chance your parents were not born in america.
There is a very high chance that you were brought up in a confucian culture at home that focused on education.
We are a community of immigrants and the children of immigrants.
And our cultural priorities leads to much better academic results.
Something like 10% of asians get a 1500+ on the SATs and 25% get above a 1400.
If you get above a 1400 on the SATs as an asian, you are 2 standard deviations above the mean for the general population at the 95th percentile but just an above average asian student at the 75th percentile.
https://satsuite.collegeboard.org/media/pdf/sat-percentile-ranks-gender-race-ethnicity.pdf
And despite all the propaganda from the C4TJ cultists TJ had one of the best college admission years in decades.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These accusations of cheating is just copium for people who can't admit that Asians (and to a lesser extent ask immigrants) are outperforming pretty much everyone else.
That's pure crap. And we're (E) Asian ethnicity (and are proud to be US citizens).
Most people don't have to point out they are citizens. But you do. Why?
We are the forever outsider. We have been since the beginning.
You understand that there is about a 95% chance your grandparents were not born in america.
Unless you are gen z, there is about a 90% chance your parents were not born in america.
There is a very high chance that you were brought up in a confucian culture at home that focused on education.
We are a community of immigrants and the children of immigrants.
And our cultural priorities leads to much better academic results.
Something like 10% of asians get a 1500+ on the SATs and 25% get above a 1400.
If you get above a 1400 on the SATs as an asian, you are 2 standard deviations above the mean for the general population at the 95th percentile but just an above average asian student at the 75th percentile.
https://satsuite.collegeboard.org/media/pdf/sat-percentile-ranks-gender-race-ethnicity.pdf
And despite all the propaganda from the C4TJ cultists TJ had one of the best college admission years in decades.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These accusations of cheating is just copium for people who can't admit that Asians (and to a lesser extent ask immigrants) are outperforming pretty much everyone else.
Or, more accurately, they're just calling it like it is. Some of the behaviors of certain prep companies were unethical (in particular asking students to memorize and report back Quant Q questions for their in-house test bank), a statement which is true regardless of the predominant race of the students who take/took those same companies courses.
I know its well established this went on but its not about race but about excluding those who could not afford to compete with a rigged process. The change made these programs accessible to far more county residents than was previously true and that better serves all of us.
It's not established even a little bit. Nobody asked 12-13 year olds to memorize test questions on a test and report back.
TJ used to be accessible to smart kids and now it is accessible to a broader range of kids and the average PSAT score dropped 120 points.
The SOL advance pass rates plummeted
The NMSF dropped in half
The math department sent out an email to all their freshman pre-calc students expressing their deep disappointment in their performance as they increased the curve by almost a full letter grade.
The number of students returning to their base school increased tenfold.
It was a disaster and the board didn't care because they had a student body that looked like a Benetton ad.
FAKENEWS!!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These accusations of cheating is just copium for people who can't admit that Asians (and to a lesser extent ask immigrants) are outperforming pretty much everyone else.
That's pure crap. And we're (E) Asian ethnicity (and are proud to be US citizens).
Most people don't have to point out they are citizens. But you do. Why?
We are the forever outsider. We have been since the beginning.
You understand that there is about a 95% chance your grandparents were not born in america.
Unless you are gen z, there is about a 90% chance your parents were not born in america.
There is a very high chance that you were brought up in a confucian culture at home that focused on education.
We are a community of immigrants and the children of immigrants.
And our cultural priorities leads to much better academic results.
Something like 10% of asians get a 1500+ on the SATs and 25% get above a 1400.
If you get above a 1400 on the SATs as an asian, you are 2 standard deviations above the mean for the general population at the 95th percentile but just an above average asian student at the 75th percentile.
https://satsuite.collegeboard.org/media/pdf/sat-percentile-ranks-gender-race-ethnicity.pdf
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These accusations of cheating is just copium for people who can't admit that Asians (and to a lesser extent ask immigrants) are outperforming pretty much everyone else.
Or, more accurately, they're just calling it like it is. Some of the behaviors of certain prep companies were unethical (in particular asking students to memorize and report back Quant Q questions for their in-house test bank), a statement which is true regardless of the predominant race of the students who take/took those same companies courses.
I know its well established this went on but its not about race but about excluding those who could not afford to compete with a rigged process. The change made these programs accessible to far more county residents than was previously true and that better serves all of us.
It's not established even a little bit. Nobody asked 12-13 year olds to memorize test questions on a test and report back.
TJ used to be accessible to smart kids and now it is accessible to a broader range of kids and the average PSAT score dropped 120 points.
The SOL advance pass rates plummeted
The NMSF dropped in half
The math department sent out an email to all their freshman pre-calc students expressing their deep disappointment in their performance as they increased the curve by almost a full letter grade.
The number of students returning to their base school increased tenfold.
It was a disaster and the board didn't care because they had a student body that looked like a Benetton ad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These accusations of cheating is just copium for people who can't admit that Asians (and to a lesser extent ask immigrants) are outperforming pretty much everyone else.
Or, more accurately, they're just calling it like it is. Some of the behaviors of certain prep companies were unethical (in particular asking students to memorize and report back Quant Q questions for their in-house test bank), a statement which is true regardless of the predominant race of the students who take/took those same companies courses.
I know its well established this went on but its not about race but about excluding those who could not afford to compete with a rigged process. The change made these programs accessible to far more county residents than was previously true and that better serves all of us.
It's not established even a little bit. Nobody asked 12-13 year olds to memorize test questions on a test and report back.
TJ used to be accessible to smart kids and now it is accessible to a broader range of kids and the average PSAT score dropped 120 points.
The SOL advance pass rates plummeted
The NMSF dropped in half
The math department sent out an email to all their freshman pre-calc students expressing their deep disappointment in their performance as they increased the curve by almost a full letter grade.
The number of students returning to their base school increased tenfold.
It was a disaster and the board didn't care because they had a student body that looked like a Benetton ad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These accusations of cheating is just copium for people who can't admit that Asians (and to a lesser extent ask immigrants) are outperforming pretty much everyone else.
Or, more accurately, they're just calling it like it is. Some of the behaviors of certain prep companies were unethical (in particular asking students to memorize and report back Quant Q questions for their in-house test bank), a statement which is true regardless of the predominant race of the students who take/took those same companies courses.
I know its well established this went on but its not about race but about excluding those who could not afford to compete with a rigged process. The change made these programs accessible to far more county residents than was previously true and that better serves all of us.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These accusations of cheating is just copium for people who can't admit that Asians (and to a lesser extent ask immigrants) are outperforming pretty much everyone else.
That's pure crap. And we're (E) Asian ethnicity (and are proud to be US citizens).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These accusations of cheating is just copium for people who can't admit that Asians (and to a lesser extent ask immigrants) are outperforming pretty much everyone else.
Or, more accurately, they're just calling it like it is. Some of the behaviors of certain prep companies were unethical (in particular asking students to memorize and report back Quant Q questions for their in-house test bank), a statement which is true regardless of the predominant race of the students who take/took those same companies courses.
I know its well established this went on but its not about race but about excluding those who could not afford to compete with a rigged process. The change made these programs accessible to far more county residents than was previously true and that better serves all of us.