Anonymous wrote:
I am a TJ mom of a 9th grader who is thriving there and will welcome the incoming freshmen in with open arms. Her teachers are NOT at all opposed to the new admissions process. They are paid to TEACH and that is what they will do. And, she has had amazing teachers - even for math.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FCPS in court said TJ is not a gifted school, so there is no guarantee they are looking for students in advanced classes.
FALSE. The court ruled that TJ IS a gifted school. Stop spreading fake information.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
They explained this. It is unweighted GPA they look at, you have to have a 3.5, and be in gifted classes.
That's just not true, all you need is three honors classes including math and science
So, there's no boost for taking all honors or for taking Algebra rather than M7H in 7th grade? That's absurd. A kid in the higher level math should be given some credit for it. Likewise, a kid taking 4 Honors or AAP classes is taking a tougher load than a kid in only 3 Honors and should get some credit. It seems like people who want to maximize their chances of getting into TJ should then take regular English or History, whichever subject is weaker, and take M7H even if they easily qualify for Algebra. That would be the easiest way to guarantee a 4.0, which would land a kid in the top 1.5% over the kids who took harder courses but maybe got an A- in something.
Haven't you heard? Merit, innate talent and hard work don't matter anymore. Equity over everything else now. USA is on the fast track to socialism now, baby!!! If you're curious what life will be like in the coming years, just ask anyone from Cuba, Venezuela, China, Zimbabwe, Soviet countries, etc. This is only the beginning.
Unbelievable. Why would you assume that kids getting in under the new system don't have innate talent or that they don't work hard?
I am a TJ mom of a 9th grader who is thriving there and will welcome the incoming freshmen in with open arms. Her teachers are NOT at all opposed to the new admissions process. They are paid to TEACH and that is what they will do. And, she has had amazing teachers - even for math.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
They explained this. It is unweighted GPA they look at, you have to have a 3.5, and be in gifted classes.
That's just not true, all you need is three honors classes including math and science
So, there's no boost for taking all honors or for taking Algebra rather than M7H in 7th grade? That's absurd. A kid in the higher level math should be given some credit for it. Likewise, a kid taking 4 Honors or AAP classes is taking a tougher load than a kid in only 3 Honors and should get some credit. It seems like people who want to maximize their chances of getting into TJ should then take regular English or History, whichever subject is weaker, and take M7H even if they easily qualify for Algebra. That would be the easiest way to guarantee a 4.0, which would land a kid in the top 1.5% over the kids who took harder courses but maybe got an A- in something.
Haven't you heard? Merit, innate talent and hard work don't matter anymore. Equity over everything else now. USA is on the fast track to socialism now, baby!!! If you're curious what life will be like in the coming years, just ask anyone from Cuba, Venezuela, China, Zimbabwe, Soviet countries, etc. This is only the beginning.
Anonymous wrote:How is it that the top 1.5% will still be found, as PPs have said? There will be way more than 1.5% of students at each school who have straight As. There are no teacher recommendations or standardized test results to distinguish between all the straight A students, only a subjectively graded essay test that is largely about character traits that have no explicit connection to STEM. I truly do not understand how this process will catch the top STEM kids.
Anonymous wrote:I hate to give this stupid thread a boost, but can't help myself.
I am a TJ parent. The TJ teachers openly welcome the new admissions system - they are excited for a different crop of kids. There are many, many qualified children who would thrive at TJ who don't get in every single year - it is a crap shoot-so why not be a lottery instead of a crap shoot. And the truly elite kids (yes, they exist) will have no problem being identified in the top 1.5%.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I heard from my friend’s son , first year freshman that their teachers don’t teach much. They just give them links to videos and they are expected to figure out on their own. It works so far, but of course with the new admission changes, teachers are going to be in shock with the class results if they don’t improve their teaching skills & instead expect kids to figure out, or TJ is going down.
I will not comment on the new admission part, but the bold part is true. I have a 9th grader at TJ, the math class consists on watching teaching videos the night before and teachers are answering questions during class time after kids try to understand the video themselves. Tests include materials not covered in the videos and are timed. It was a shock for my kid and sadly the grades reflect that. Other subjects are fine.
Anonymous wrote:This is 100% untrue. My daughter is a freshman at the school and the teachers are incredibly fabulous. Quit it with the stupid negativity and secondhand information.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
They explained this. It is unweighted GPA they look at, you have to have a 3.5, and be in gifted classes.
That's just not true, all you need is three honors classes including math and science
So, there's no boost for taking all honors or for taking Algebra rather than M7H in 7th grade? That's absurd. A kid in the higher level math should be given some credit for it. Likewise, a kid taking 4 Honors or AAP classes is taking a tougher load than a kid in only 3 Honors and should get some credit. It seems like people who want to maximize their chances of getting into TJ should then take regular English or History, whichever subject is weaker, and take M7H even if they easily qualify for Algebra. That would be the easiest way to guarantee a 4.0, which would land a kid in the top 1.5% over the kids who took harder courses but maybe got an A- in something.
Haven't you heard? Merit, innate talent and hard work don't matter anymore. Equity over everything else now. USA is on the fast track to socialism now, baby!!! If you're curious what life will be like in the coming years, just ask anyone from Cuba, Venezuela, China, Zimbabwe, Soviet countries, etc. This is only the beginning.
+1000 Open your eyes. Stop trying to rationalize all of this equity over opportunity, cancel culture, censorship, and identity politics. Brush up on the history of socialism in other countries. It might be too late, but I'm still doing everything I can to try to reverse our downward spiral toward socialism. I urge you to do the same.
Anonymous wrote:Can current TJ parents just answer the question here.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe there will be less cheating with a different mix of kids.
Anonymous wrote:FCPS in court said TJ is not a gifted school, so there is no guarantee they are looking for students in advanced classes.