The student’s essays, student information sheet, and teacher recommendations are reviewed in three separate evaluation processes. In each of these separate processes, all semifinalists are randomly assigned to a team of two trained educators who independently evaluate the materials using rubrics designed specifically for that evaluation. A third reader is available to review materials, when necessary, and final ratings then are based on the two highest evaluations given to the applicant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To many qualified students have been turned away from TJ to allow students who need help in remedial math to take their places. There are 10 students who were denied a space for every remedial student at TJ. That is why this year, an independednt panel is deciding. Long over due IMHO.
The admission process became too political. Many years ago, math take half of the weight in the admission test. Now language take up 2/3. It is not a surprise that some kids are getting weaker in math.
And you know why they did this? To admit less Asians. They were getting too many Asians, so they changed the admissions to count Math less and language more, including more emphasis on the essays, hoping it would make it harder on Asians. And I think it worked. Obviously, there are still a lot of Asians there, but I think there would be even more without the change.
Anonymous wrote:
I think the County should make it somebody's job to do a study comparing the application packages (test scores, grades, essays, teacher recs) of students needing math help to those who did not. The results of a survey of student participation in TJ prep classes in seventh and eighth grades should also be used to compare the two groups. It would be useful to find any commonalities among the group needing extra help in order to move forward to find students who have the best chance of being successful at TJ in the future.
We can speculate about the situation but only a real study of the facts will lead to a good answer.
Anonymous wrote:My child goes to TJ. There are a few things going on here. First, there are no kids at TJ in "remedial math". What that article referred to was the fact that 1/3 of last year's freshman class had a B average or below which meant they were on the academic watch list and were receiving extra tutoring (students must maintain a 3.0 GPA to stay at TJ). The low grades in the math classes were partially due to the vast majority of students entering TJ having already taken Geometry in middle school, as opposed to just a few years ago when most students took Geometry in 9th grade at TJ. Since classes at TJ are taught at a higher, more accelerated level, the students who had already taken Geometry weren't as well prepared for the Algebra 2/precalculus curriculum as they were in the past. Also, many of the newer math teachers do not give partial credit for test answers that may have been done correctly, except for perhaps missing the correct units or reversing a sign.
I agree with the article that the admissions process is not designed to select math geniuses. The math portion of the admissions test only counts for 20% of the final decision while test essays and the student information sheet (which this year was 3 very subjective essays given under controlled testing conditions) count for 45% of the final decision score. There seems to be a disconnect between the admissions office and the school staff as to what kind of student they believe belongs at the school. For example, the biology teachers design tests that reward rote memorization of picky little points (ie: what's the chemical formula for this one particular enzyme), instead of testing on the overarching concepts and problem-solving. But the admissions office seems to be selecting students who have a strong interest in STEM, as well as being more holistic thinkers - these students are not doing well on these tests, and the overwhelming majority of their grades is based on tests and quizzes, not labs.
Anonymous wrote:What really needs to happen is TJ needs to be for a limited geographical area. Why are they taking kids from Loudoun, Fauquier, etc? There just aren't enough places at TJ to handle all the smart kids, and so many well-qualified ones don't get in. If STEM is the now and future, why aren't we building more schools for this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To many qualified students have been turned away from TJ to allow students who need help in remedial math to take their places. There are 10 students who were denied a space for every remedial student at TJ. That is why this year, an independednt panel is deciding. Long over due IMHO.
The admission process became too political. Many years ago, math take half of the weight in the admission test. Now language take up 2/3. It is not a surprise that some kids are getting weaker in math.
And you know why they did this? To admit less Asians. They were getting too many Asians, so they changed the admissions to count Math less and language more, including more emphasis on the essays, hoping it would make it harder on Asians. And I think it worked. Obviously, there are still a lot of Asians there, but I think there would be even more without the change.
Anonymous wrote:Loved the links above--especially the article from the TJ student.
The facts are clear: the test was changed in order to get more Hispanics and African Americans.
The result of the change: Many of the WRONG Asians and Whites were admitted and remedial work is now required.
Another fact: FCPS hired a FULLTIME admissions officer whose purpose is to admit more Blacks and Hispanics to TJ.
It's not working-so why is FCPS spending the money? Shouldn't the purpose just be to get the BEST students?
My opinion: relocate the admissions officer and give the toughest test possible to the applicants.
Any student at TJ who needs ESOL instruction or ANY kind of remedial instruction should be sent back to the base school. The same goes for any kind of Special education instruction to include ED. TJ is not the place for those with special needs (with the exception of physical).