Anonymous wrote:No one going to Engineering or Tech schools which is unfortunate. STEM is a great way for lower income kids to get good high paying jobs after college graduation
Zero Howard or Morehouse on that list? That can’t be right.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:College destinations listed in here: https://www.benjaminbanneker.org/ourpages/auto/2023/10/18/42652488/BBAHS%20Information%20Resources%2023-24.pdf
This looks like a mix of colleges that should impress and ones that definitely do not. So it looks like students are probably a mix in terms of academic success from a nationwide perspective. I entirely understand how this is leagues ahead of most DCPS high schools.
Zero Howard or Morehouse on that list? That can’t be right.
Also interesting to see 17 CUAs. That is a strong pipeline!
Remember too that these are kids that prefer HBCUs and don’t likely have giant 529s. So you’re going to see colleges like NCCU that may be unfamiliar to you instead of the lower ranked SLACs that you’d see at white UMC schools.
Anonymous wrote:No one going to Engineering or Tech schools which is unfortunate. STEM is a great way for lower income kids to get good high paying jobs after college graduation
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like Banneker is so different from other schools that test scores can’t really be the deciding factor. Do you want your kid to go to a historical black highly academically intensive school with tons of homework and less “traditional” HS culture like sports? Or do you want your kid to have a more traditional and flexible experience in a less academically focused culture?
I agree I wish the gentrifiers could understand this concept.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:College destinations listed in here: https://www.benjaminbanneker.org/ourpages/auto/2023/10/18/42652488/BBAHS%20Information%20Resources%2023-24.pdf
This looks like a mix of colleges that should impress and ones that definitely do not. So it looks like students are probably a mix in terms of academic success from a nationwide perspective. I entirely understand how this is leagues ahead of most DCPS high schools.
Zero Howard or Morehouse on that list? That can’t be right.
Also interesting to see 17 CUAs. That is a strong pipeline!
Remember too that these are kids that prefer HBCUs and don’t likely have giant 529s. So you’re going to see colleges like NCCU that may be unfamiliar to you instead of the lower ranked SLACs that you’d see at white UMC schools.
Also what’s up with no UMBC?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:College destinations listed in here: https://www.benjaminbanneker.org/ourpages/auto/2023/10/18/42652488/BBAHS%20Information%20Resources%2023-24.pdf
This looks like a mix of colleges that should impress and ones that definitely do not. So it looks like students are probably a mix in terms of academic success from a nationwide perspective. I entirely understand how this is leagues ahead of most DCPS high schools.
Zero Howard or Morehouse on that list? That can’t be right.
Also interesting to see 17 CUAs. That is a strong pipeline!
Remember too that these are kids that prefer HBCUs and don’t likely have giant 529s. So you’re going to see colleges like NCCU that may be unfamiliar to you instead of the lower ranked SLACs that you’d see at white UMC schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:College destinations listed in here: https://www.benjaminbanneker.org/ourpages/auto/2023/10/18/42652488/BBAHS%20Information%20Resources%2023-24.pdf
This looks like a mix of colleges that should impress and ones that definitely do not. So it looks like students are probably a mix in terms of academic success from a nationwide perspective. I entirely understand how this is leagues ahead of most DCPS high schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:College destinations listed in here: https://www.benjaminbanneker.org/ourpages/auto/2023/10/18/42652488/BBAHS%20Information%20Resources%2023-24.pdf
This looks like a mix of colleges that should impress and ones that definitely do not. So it looks like students are probably a mix in terms of academic success from a nationwide perspective. I entirely understand how this is leagues ahead of most DCPS high schools.
Anonymous wrote:I feel like Banneker is so different from other schools that test scores can’t really be the deciding factor. Do you want your kid to go to a historical black highly academically intensive school with tons of homework and less “traditional” HS culture like sports? Or do you want your kid to have a more traditional and flexible experience in a less academically focused culture?
Anonymous wrote:They might have a list of college acceptances from 2020 or so somewhere on their website, but it's not like a private school where they circulate a list as a recruiting tool. Anecdotally, this year I know of acceptances at Cornell (full ride), Yale, and the AU full ride people showed up at the school for a public announcement a few weeks ago. My Banneker student is not in 12th so that's all I have confirmation of so far this year. Can try to find out more.
Anonymous wrote:College destinations listed in here: https://www.benjaminbanneker.org/ourpages/auto/2023/10/18/42652488/BBAHS%20Information%20Resources%2023-24.pdf