Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow. Some people never outgrow the HS bullly stage. These are kids. And kids who are working hard, staying out of trouble.
What is wrong with people that they think attacking kids as young as 14 is somehow Okay?
Were there no consequences for the TJ caught up in that cheating scandal? I thought they ended up in trouble.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow. Some people never outgrow the HS bullly stage. These are kids. And kids who are working hard, staying out of trouble.
What is wrong with people that they think attacking kids as young as 14 is somehow Okay?
Were there no consequences for the TJ caught up in that cheating scandal? I thought they ended up in trouble.
Anonymous wrote:Wow. Some people never outgrow the HS bullly stage. These are kids. And kids who are working hard, staying out of trouble.
What is wrong with people that they think attacking kids as young as 14 is somehow Okay?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That is what they say - it sells out a 10,000 seat arena in less than 5 minutes, and has over 700 performers and more than 20 acts. Certainly haven't heard of anything bigger anywhere.
In addition - your snark about whether TJ kids fit in with others shows your immaturity, and that you have not actually been to the school. Just as many great and personable kids there as at any other school.
Apart from science things, they do well in Debate and Model UN and such, at conferences at Ivy League and other colleges, and get along very well with those peers, who are from all over the country. They participate in foreign exchange programs with kids from other countries -- and all have a good time. No way you can credibly say that TJ kids can't fit in at college, unless you are just ignorant.
Or unless you’ve seen first-hand how awkward many TJ students and alumni are - students who lack elementary social skills and adults still making sure well into their 30s and 40s that people know they went to TJ. It can be painful to witness.
+1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That is what they say - it sells out a 10,000 seat arena in less than 5 minutes, and has over 700 performers and more than 20 acts. Certainly haven't heard of anything bigger anywhere.
In addition - your snark about whether TJ kids fit in with others shows your immaturity, and that you have not actually been to the school. Just as many great and personable kids there as at any other school.
Apart from science things, they do well in Debate and Model UN and such, at conferences at Ivy League and other colleges, and get along very well with those peers, who are from all over the country. They participate in foreign exchange programs with kids from other countries -- and all have a good time. No way you can credibly say that TJ kids can't fit in at college, unless you are just ignorant.
Or unless you’ve seen first-hand how awkward many TJ students and alumni are - students who lack elementary social skills and adults still making sure well into their 30s and 40s that people know they went to TJ. It can be painful to witness.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That is what they say - it sells out a 10,000 seat arena in less than 5 minutes, and has over 700 performers and more than 20 acts. Certainly haven't heard of anything bigger anywhere.
In addition - your snark about whether TJ kids fit in with others shows your immaturity, and that you have not actually been to the school. Just as many great and personable kids there as at any other school.
Apart from science things, they do well in Debate and Model UN and such, at conferences at Ivy League and other colleges, and get along very well with those peers, who are from all over the country. They participate in foreign exchange programs with kids from other countries -- and all have a good time. No way you can credibly say that TJ kids can't fit in at college, unless you are just ignorant.
Or unless you’ve seen first-hand how awkward many TJ students and alumni are - students who lack elementary social skills and adults still making sure well into their 30s and 40s that people know they went to TJ. It can be painful to witness.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That is what they say - it sells out a 10,000 seat arena in less than 5 minutes, and has over 700 performers and more than 20 acts. Certainly haven't heard of anything bigger anywhere.
In addition - your snark about whether TJ kids fit in with others shows your immaturity, and that you have not actually been to the school. Just as many great and personable kids there as at any other school.
Apart from science things, they do well in Debate and Model UN and such, at conferences at Ivy League and other colleges, and get along very well with those peers, who are from all over the country. They participate in foreign exchange programs with kids from other countries -- and all have a good time. No way you can credibly say that TJ kids can't fit in at college, unless you are just ignorant.
Or unless you’ve seen first-hand how awkward many TJ students and alumni are - students who lack elementary social skills and adults still making sure well into their 30s and 40s that people know they went to TJ. It can be painful to witness.
Anonymous wrote:That is what they say - it sells out a 10,000 seat arena in less than 5 minutes, and has over 700 performers and more than 20 acts. Certainly haven't heard of anything bigger anywhere.
In addition - your snark about whether TJ kids fit in with others shows your immaturity, and that you have not actually been to the school. Just as many great and personable kids there as at any other school.
Apart from science things, they do well in Debate and Model UN and such, at conferences at Ivy League and other colleges, and get along very well with those peers, who are from all over the country. They participate in foreign exchange programs with kids from other countries -- and all have a good time. No way you can credibly say that TJ kids can't fit in at college, unless you are just ignorant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid graduated from TJ recently with 4.0 unweighted GPA with ton of APs and post APs. He also headed one academic team and another non-academic group and participated in other various activities while at TJ.
He thinks TJ was difficult but that it was worth it since TJ prepared him well for a challenging major at a challenging university and, that he thinks he will never be surrounded by so many smart, creative and ambitious kids. Not in grad school and certainly not at work. (He interned at a large tech company (Silicon Valley) and also at a quantitative finance company).
This is interesting.
Anonymous wrote:One thing that is actually interesting about TJ is the program going on tonight at George Mason - iNight ... an annual event. The tickets sell out about 2 minutes after they are released. The largest high school cultural event in the country - put on entirely by students. Google it - you can see the quality of the acts ... many of these are just kids who never danced before.