Anonymous wrote:That's kind of the point of this thread. If approx 30% of every high schools applicants get in, it might be easier to crack that percentage depending on the school. I imagine that group might look a little different school to school.
Maybe at Langley it's 12 AP's, but at Stuart 4 is fine.
There is a lot of flaming different schools on this board, and talk of the coveted pyramids, but I think people are creating problems for themselves. I'd rather have a well rounded child, that is healthy, well rested, and developing other interests. A child that isn't unnecessarily stressed and enjoys their time at school. I truly don't think there is much difference in the quality of instruction between Yorktown and Annandale. Seems the extra curriculars and other opportunities are abundant all across nova.
Seems people are placing pride and home value first. Perhaps the "best" school, isn't the smartest choice...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UVA and W&M know that, in terms of achieving a critical mass of very good students within the constraints of the in state, out of state ratio, their bread is buttered in nova. Outside of nova it's still a pretty Podunk state.
The schools in the Richmond suburbs are often strong, as are some in Virginia Beach and other pockets of the Hampton Roads area.
Anonymous wrote:UVA and W&M know that, in terms of achieving a critical mass of very good students within the constraints of the in state, out of state ratio, their bread is buttered in nova. Outside of nova it's still a pretty Podunk state.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:TJ class of 2016 - about 450 students - 348 apply, 224 admitted, 80 enroll.
Wow - that's a lot of rejection for that school. Gotta suck.
They probably settle for William and Mary, and which has totally been eclipsed by UVa over the past 10 or so years and has an abysmal yield rate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:TJ class of 2016 - about 450 students - 348 apply, 224 admitted, 80 enroll.
Wow - that's a lot of rejection for that school. Gotta suck.
Anonymous wrote:wow- you are ignorant. Salem and Roanoke have great student athletes with UVA and Tech as attractive options.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where do people come up with the 10-12 AP thing? That's completely made up, based on my observations. Plenty of kids are getting in without that number.
Depends on the high school and whether you have a hook. No hook and from the two nova high schools I know well, the students can't get the necessary bump to their GPA without that many AP/IB classes. I've seen it with 15-20 kids in the last 4 or so years.
The nova applicants are competing against other seniors in their high school or maybe from other nova. They are not competing against kids from Roanoke who only took 4 AP classes.
Anonymous wrote:TJ class of 2016 - about 450 students - 348 apply, 224 admitted, 80 enroll.
wow- you are ignorant. Salem and Roanoke have great student athletes with UVA and Tech as attractive options.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where do people come up with the 10-12 AP thing? That's completely made up, based on my observations. Plenty of kids are getting in without that number.
Depends on the high school and whether you have a hook. No hook and from the two nova high schools I know well, the students can't get the necessary bump to their GPA without that many AP/IB classes. I've seen it with 15-20 kids in the last 4 or so years.
The nova applicants are competing against other seniors in their high school or maybe from other nova. They are not competing against kids from Roanoke who only took 4 AP classes.
Anonymous wrote:UVA for McLean HS: The class size has been around 500 recently. For the past few years, about 10% of the class gets admitted to UVA.
Year/Apply/Admit/Enroll
2016. 163. 56. 35
2015. 134. 50. 31
2014. 138. 54. 33
2013 142. 47. 29
2012. 107. 37. 27
2011. 111. 50. 37
2010. 93. 31. 16
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where do people come up with the 10-12 AP thing? That's completely made up, based on my observations. Plenty of kids are getting in without that number.
Depends on the high school and whether you have a hook. No hook and from the two nova high schools I know well, the students can't get the necessary bump to their GPA without that many AP/IB classes. I've seen it with 15-20 kids in the last 4 or so years.
The nova applicants are competing against other seniors in their high school or maybe from other nova. They are not competing against kids from Roanoke who only took 4 AP classes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Top 10% of the class to have a serious shot. Extended to top 15% if an unusual circumstance.
Students outside the top 20% don't bother applying
And yes, even if school systems say they don't rank, a hierarchy exsists
The numbers say 20-30%.
20-30% what? Get into Uva? Looking at the McLean HS stats that someone posted, it looks like it's 10%. We're at McLean as well, and 10% getting admitted sounds about right. Somehow, that number seems to stay consistent every year.