Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:went to MoCo public school - and graduated summa from an Ivy. More kids at my Ivy from my public that year than from the Big 3 combined. And None of the Big 3 kids were magna, or summa.
I call BS on this. If you are referring to the most selective Ivy's, then the matriculation stats you site don't hold up (see link). Using this same year as a comparison, SFS had a similar number of acceptances to H/Y/P alone as the combined acceptances on this list. Of course, in certain cases there were multiple acceptances for the same student, for both the publics and the privates. And when you eliminate the magnet school from the list, it isn't even close to the number from SFS, NCS, STA, GDS (which combined have a graduating class about the same size as one of the listed publics).
http://bethesdamagazine.com/College_Chart.pdf
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:went to MoCo public school - and graduated summa from an Ivy. More kids at my Ivy from my public that year than from the Big 3 combined. And None of the Big 3 kids were magna, or summa.
Number less important than percentage
That is such a myth on this site. You aren't competing with the kids who drop out of public school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For example, I know kids who graduated from Wilson H.S. and SWW in DC who did well for college acceptance. They would have been 'run of the mill' kids in private.
Parent of a "Big 3" student with lots of friends at Wilson and Walls. I know you were trying to be complimentary, but it comes off as patronizing. The students who do well at Walls and Wilson would do equally well at any of the selective private schools. They certainly wouldn't be run of the mill. Smart driven children are going to thrive anywhere that they are offered the opportunity to shine, regardless of their parents' ability to pay $40k/year.
+1 -- from another parent of grads/students at Big 3 with friends at Wilson and Walls and Ellington
Anonymous wrote:went to MoCo public school - and graduated summa from an Ivy. More kids at my Ivy from my public that year than from the Big 3 combined. And None of the Big 3 kids were magna, or summa.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:went to MoCo public school - and graduated summa from an Ivy. More kids at my Ivy from my public that year than from the Big 3 combined. And None of the Big 3 kids were magna, or summa.
Number less important than percentage
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For example, I know kids who graduated from Wilson H.S. and SWW in DC who did well for college acceptance. They would have been 'run of the mill' kids in private.
Parent of a "Big 3" student with lots of friends at Wilson and Walls. I know you were trying to be complimentary, but it comes off as patronizing. The students who do well at Walls and Wilson would do equally well at any of the selective private schools. They certainly wouldn't be run of the mill. Smart driven children are going to thrive anywhere that they are offered the opportunity to shine, regardless of their parents' ability to pay $40k/year.
+1 -- from another parent of grads/students at Big 3 with friends at Wilson and Walls and Ellington
I'll bite! Why did you choose a big 3 over Wilson, Walls or Ellington?
Anonymous wrote:
http://www.bethesdamagazine.com/Bethesda-Magazine/September-October-2014/College-Bound/
Actual numbers on MoCo public students being admitted to colleges.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For example, I know kids who graduated from Wilson H.S. and SWW in DC who did well for college acceptance. They would have been 'run of the mill' kids in private.
Parent of a "Big 3" student with lots of friends at Wilson and Walls. I know you were trying to be complimentary, but it comes off as patronizing. The students who do well at Walls and Wilson would do equally well at any of the selective private schools. They certainly wouldn't be run of the mill. Smart driven children are going to thrive anywhere that they are offered the opportunity to shine, regardless of their parents' ability to pay $40k/year.
+1 -- from another parent of grads/students at Big 3 with friends at Wilson and Walls and Ellington
I'll bite! Why did you choose a big 3 over Wilson, Walls or Ellington?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For example, I know kids who graduated from Wilson H.S. and SWW in DC who did well for college acceptance. They would have been 'run of the mill' kids in private.
Parent of a "Big 3" student with lots of friends at Wilson and Walls. I know you were trying to be complimentary, but it comes off as patronizing. The students who do well at Walls and Wilson would do equally well at any of the selective private schools. They certainly wouldn't be run of the mill. Smart driven children are going to thrive anywhere that they are offered the opportunity to shine, regardless of their parents' ability to pay $40k/year.
+1 -- from another parent of grads/students at Big 3 with friends at Wilson and Walls and Ellington
Anonymous wrote:https://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/class-struggle/post/private-vs-public-no-advantage/2011/11/16/gIQAfMlSTN_blog.html
Someone looked at it in DC. It didn't make a difference.
Anonymous wrote:I will tell you, I think the problem is when the kids coming from publics, where they were not in heated competition with a large part of the rest of their class, tend to have a problem is when they are suddenly in at an elite college and not a shining star for the first time and/or the first time they fail at something in college. Kids coming from top privates have usually had both things happen to them before and have learned how to deal. Kids at the top at a middle road public rarely do. I speak from experience.
Anonymous wrote:went to MoCo public school - and graduated summa from an Ivy. More kids at my Ivy from my public that year than from the Big 3 combined. And None of the Big 3 kids were magna, or summa.