Anonymous wrote: I think in Md you typically need 1600 -- there are probably more than 30 kids in the state who do that.
Anonymous wrote:Quick review and counting looks like, with each school's multi-year average in (parentheses):
STA 10 (average 5)
NCS 6 (7)
Potomac 6 (2)
Maret 6 (6)
SFS 7 (11)
GDS 11 (6)
Holton 1 (2)
Landon 1 (1)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Quick review and counting looks like:
STA 10
NCS 6
Potomac 6
Maret 6
SFS 7
GDS 11
Holton 1
Landon 1
I'm seeing 8 from Sidwell. Congrats to all of the kids!
Anonymous wrote:My child isn't on it...what a travesty! Of course DC got better ACT scores than SAT and those don't count
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:2. The National Merit Semifinalist program effectively penalizes Washington, D.C. by pegging the D.C. qualifying score to the top in the country. In the Presidential Scholar Candidate selection process, being from DC is more advantageous than being from VA or MD. The reason is that the Presidential Scholar program uses a "flat" approach not taking into account the state's population or number of high scoring students. The top 20 male test takers and top 20 female test takers in any jurisdiction, whether it's giant California or tiny Delaware or tiny Washington, D.C., are designated as candidates.
I don't follow your No.2. -- there are way more than 40 kids listed for most states.
Different poster here. I think there are more than 40 because they accept all students tied at the cutoff score. So if there are 19 male students with scores in the 2370-2400 range, and the 20th (final) male student will be at 2360, then they will award Candidate status to all male students scoring 2360, even if there are 100 of them (hypothetically speaking of course). As a result, even the least populous state (Wyoming) will have some ties at the bottom end and thus exceed the 40-student minimum (WY has 50). Populous states will therefore have an advantage because they can generate more ties: e.g., California with 452 Candidates, of which a whopping 412 got in a ties.
Locally, DC has a small population, so it managed only 5 ties (45 Candidates total). Virginia is the 12th most populous state (8.3m), so it got 61 ties (101 total). Interestingly, Maryland is significantly smaller (19th most populous with 5.9m), and yet it logged 70 ties (110 total). I can think of a couple possible reasons MD might have a higher number than VA, but they're just speculation.
Anonymous wrote:[/b]Anonymous wrote:I will say, my child had almost-perfect SAT scores, but did not apply for this honor. I can see from the list, though, [b]that several classmates who he knows to have had lower SAT scores did apply, and have apparently made the cutoff. This is a bit self-selective in that respect.
She said the son said he said she said. How do you know? Which set of SAT scores did the College Board send your son? How many times over the last 4 years has your son taken the SAT?
You don't "apply" to this. You either make it, or get a commendation, based off of your PSAT scores, then SAT.
Anonymous wrote:Quick review and counting looks like:
STA 10
NCS 6
Potomac 6
Maret 6
SFS 7
GDS 11
Holton 1
Landon 1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:2. The National Merit Semifinalist program effectively penalizes Washington, D.C. by pegging the D.C. qualifying score to the top in the country. In the Presidential Scholar Candidate selection process, being from DC is more advantageous than being from VA or MD. The reason is that the Presidential Scholar program uses a "flat" approach not taking into account the state's population or number of high scoring students. The top 20 male test takers and top 20 female test takers in any jurisdiction, whether it's giant California or tiny Delaware or tiny Washington, D.C., are designated as candidates.
I don't follow your No.2. -- there are way more than 40 kids listed for most states.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Its so interesting because I have to assume a large population of kids from all of these schools live in Maryland, yet these schools appear almost nowhere on the list of Maryland nominees.
Only one student from these schools on the VA list.
Anonymous wrote:Its so interesting because I have to assume a large population of kids from all of these schools live in Maryland, yet these schools appear almost nowhere on the list of Maryland nominees.
[/b]Anonymous wrote:I will say, my child had almost-perfect SAT scores, but did not apply for this honor. I can see from the list, though, [b]that several classmates who he knows to have had lower SAT scores did apply, and have apparently made the cutoff. This is a bit self-selective in that respect.
She said the son said he said she said. How do you know? Which set of SAT scores did the College Board send your son? How many times over the last 4 years has your son taken the SAT?
Anonymous wrote:There are two big differences between the Presidential Scholar Candidate selection process and National Merit Semifinalist selection process that are relevant in looking at how schools "did":
1. For the Presidential Scholar program, they look at where the student lives, not the school location. So if you go to school in DC (at say, Maret or GDS) you are still matched up against other students from the jurisdiction in which you live.
2. The National Merit Semifinalist program effectively penalizes Washington, D.C. by pegging the D.C. qualifying score to the top in the country. In the Presidential Scholar Candidate selection process, being from DC is more advantageous than being from VA or MD. The reason is that the Presidential Scholar program uses a "flat" approach not taking into account the state's population or number of high scoring students. The top 20 male test takers and top 20 female test takers in any jurisdiction, whether it's giant California or tiny Delaware or tiny Washington, D.C., are designated as candidates.
So, the D.C. private schools -- which have a lot of D.C. residents who are also disproportionately good test takers compared to the entire pool of D.C. high school seniors -- have a built in structural advantage when it comes to Presidential Scholars. But those same D.C. kids with high scores have a built in disadvantage for National Merit Semifinalist, so it works out in a cosmic sense.