Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Curie kids only got accepted?. Is there any other good institute for these trainings ?.
Training in what?
For AOS/AET/TJ entrance test
That's like asking how to train for winning a lottery.
Other than that there are a ton of enrichment centers that teach stem subjects like math, english, and science, over multiple years starting in elementary.
What are you looking for a lottery training business or stem enrichment centers like Curie ?
They help with the TJ application essays, and AOS/AET still has subject tests.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Curie kids only got accepted?. Is there any other good institute for these trainings ?.
Training in what?
For AOS/AET/TJ entrance test
That's like asking how to train for winning a lottery.
Other than that there are a ton of enrichment centers that teach stem subjects like math, english, and science, over multiple years starting in elementary.
What are you looking for a lottery training business or stem enrichment centers like Curie ?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Curie kids only got accepted?. Is there any other good institute for these trainings ?.
Training in what?
For AOS/AET/TJ entrance test
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Curie kids only got accepted?. Is there any other good institute for these trainings ?.
Training in what?
Anonymous wrote:Curie kids only got accepted?. Is there any other good institute for these trainings ?.
I know someone who joined Durie just for the essay training. Might have been a little earlier but joined in 8th grade.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know several Indian parents, and it seems common among them to justify their child's decision to decline a TJ offer by attributing it to reasons like distance, college admissions, or sleep deprivation, rather than admitting their child lacks confidence to handle TJ's rigorous curriculum. It's quite annoying when these parents repeatedly bring up the topic by themselves, boasting about how their child received a TJ offer but turned it down, as if the offer alone validates their child's academic ability. These are worst parents to get advise from when evaluating a TJ offer, as they go to great lengths to convince of drawbacks of TJ. I'm glad we didn't take their input seriously, and accepted our TJ offer.
You are 100% correct ( i am an Indian myself)... its more for self gratification than for any of those things they mention. These are parents who are trying to live their unrealized dreams through their kids lives while trying to up their social stature within the community. For those exact same reasons mentioned - we didnt apply to TJ at all...kid is waitlisted in AOS/AET both at this time. If not either of those, perfectly fine with the base school. Sun will rise the next day!
In my view - The above 2 posts are a generalized ill informed opinion :
Irrespective of nationality/ethnicity - I think lot of parents who reject TJ or AOL do not do apply for self gratification . Most of the parents go by kids opinion/suggestion by teacher and apply for both schools knowing well that they have to reject either of one if the kids gets into both. Reason for that is they want to provide the kids options to choose from.
Every year There have been cases of kids who got into AOL and TJ but later changed mind to go to Base school for multitude of reasons..
You misunderstood. The poster is not suggesting that kids shouldn't apply to both TJ and AOL. They are referring to what parents did after decisions were made, boasting perennially about letting go of their TJ lottery offer.
Exactly! it is not about kids and choices. Its about parents trying to wash away their kids' hard work by saying that they only let go of TJ because it was hard or far or some other stupid reason. My general retort back to such an answer is "getting into TJ is not easy and your Kid busted their backside to get in and they got picked and all this while you could have saved them that rigor if you would have helped them understand that it was going to hard and it was going to be far and AOS/AET were anyways better. why make them go through the testing and prep.".... all i get back is indignant stares back!
A small correction: Gaining admission to TJ is based on a lottery system biased towards equity and diversity, no merit considerations. However, succeeding at TJ requires a strong foundation in middle school math, english and science. This is what Curie and other multi-year enrichment programs aim for—to ensure success after gaining admission to TJ. We approached Curie shortly after submitting the TJ application, hoping for essay training alone, but they turned us away.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know several Indian parents, and it seems common among them to justify their child's decision to decline a TJ offer by attributing it to reasons like distance, college admissions, or sleep deprivation, rather than admitting their child lacks confidence to handle TJ's rigorous curriculum. It's quite annoying when these parents repeatedly bring up the topic by themselves, boasting about how their child received a TJ offer but turned it down, as if the offer alone validates their child's academic ability. These are worst parents to get advise from when evaluating a TJ offer, as they go to great lengths to convince of drawbacks of TJ. I'm glad we didn't take their input seriously, and accepted our TJ offer.
You are 100% correct ( i am an Indian myself)... its more for self gratification than for any of those things they mention. These are parents who are trying to live their unrealized dreams through their kids lives while trying to up their social stature within the community. For those exact same reasons mentioned - we didnt apply to TJ at all...kid is waitlisted in AOS/AET both at this time. If not either of those, perfectly fine with the base school. Sun will rise the next day!
In my view - The above 2 posts are a generalized ill informed opinion :
Irrespective of nationality/ethnicity - I think lot of parents who reject TJ or AOL do not do apply for self gratification . Most of the parents go by kids opinion/suggestion by teacher and apply for both schools knowing well that they have to reject either of one if the kids gets into both. Reason for that is they want to provide the kids options to choose from.
Every year There have been cases of kids who got into AOL and TJ but later changed mind to go to Base school for multitude of reasons..
You misunderstood. The poster is not suggesting that kids shouldn't apply to both TJ and AOL. They are referring to what parents did after decisions were made, boasting perennially about letting go of their TJ lottery offer.
Exactly! it is not about kids and choices. Its about parents trying to wash away their kids' hard work by saying that they only let go of TJ because it was hard or far or some other stupid reason. My general retort back to such an answer is "getting into TJ is not easy and your Kid busted their backside to get in and they got picked and all this while you could have saved them that rigor if you would have helped them understand that it was going to hard and it was going to be far and AOS/AET were anyways better. why make them go through the testing and prep.".... all i get back is indignant stares back!
A small correction: Gaining admission to TJ is based on a lottery system biased towards equity and diversity, no merit considerations. However, succeeding at TJ requires a strong foundation in middle school math, english and science. This is what Curie and other multi-year enrichment programs aim for—to ensure success after gaining admission to TJ. We approached Curie shortly after submitting the TJ application, hoping for essay training alone, but they turned us away.
if you are gonna say bullshit atleast include the truth in it - there is no lottery
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know several Indian parents, and it seems common among them to justify their child's decision to decline a TJ offer by attributing it to reasons like distance, college admissions, or sleep deprivation, rather than admitting their child lacks confidence to handle TJ's rigorous curriculum. It's quite annoying when these parents repeatedly bring up the topic by themselves, boasting about how their child received a TJ offer but turned it down, as if the offer alone validates their child's academic ability. These are worst parents to get advise from when evaluating a TJ offer, as they go to great lengths to convince of drawbacks of TJ. I'm glad we didn't take their input seriously, and accepted our TJ offer.
You are 100% correct ( i am an Indian myself)... its more for self gratification than for any of those things they mention. These are parents who are trying to live their unrealized dreams through their kids lives while trying to up their social stature within the community. For those exact same reasons mentioned - we didnt apply to TJ at all...kid is waitlisted in AOS/AET both at this time. If not either of those, perfectly fine with the base school. Sun will rise the next day!
In my view - The above 2 posts are a generalized ill informed opinion :
Irrespective of nationality/ethnicity - I think lot of parents who reject TJ or AOL do not do apply for self gratification . Most of the parents go by kids opinion/suggestion by teacher and apply for both schools knowing well that they have to reject either of one if the kids gets into both. Reason for that is they want to provide the kids options to choose from.
Every year There have been cases of kids who got into AOL and TJ but later changed mind to go to Base school for multitude of reasons..
You misunderstood. The poster is not suggesting that kids shouldn't apply to both TJ and AOL. They are referring to what parents did after decisions were made, boasting perennially about letting go of their TJ lottery offer.
Exactly! it is not about kids and choices. Its about parents trying to wash away their kids' hard work by saying that they only let go of TJ because it was hard or far or some other stupid reason. My general retort back to such an answer is "getting into TJ is not easy and your Kid busted their backside to get in and they got picked and all this while you could have saved them that rigor if you would have helped them understand that it was going to hard and it was going to be far and AOS/AET were anyways better. why make them go through the testing and prep.".... all i get back is indignant stares back!
A small correction: Gaining admission to TJ is based on a lottery system biased towards equity and diversity, no merit considerations. However, succeeding at TJ requires a strong foundation in middle school math, english and science. This is what Curie and other multi-year enrichment programs aim for—to ensure success after gaining admission to TJ. We approached Curie shortly after submitting the TJ application, hoping for essay training alone, but they turned us away.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know several Indian parents, and it seems common among them to justify their child's decision to decline a TJ offer by attributing it to reasons like distance, college admissions, or sleep deprivation, rather than admitting their child lacks confidence to handle TJ's rigorous curriculum. It's quite annoying when these parents repeatedly bring up the topic by themselves, boasting about how their child received a TJ offer but turned it down, as if the offer alone validates their child's academic ability. These are worst parents to get advise from when evaluating a TJ offer, as they go to great lengths to convince of drawbacks of TJ. I'm glad we didn't take their input seriously, and accepted our TJ offer.
You are 100% correct ( i am an Indian myself)... its more for self gratification than for any of those things they mention. These are parents who are trying to live their unrealized dreams through their kids lives while trying to up their social stature within the community. For those exact same reasons mentioned - we didnt apply to TJ at all...kid is waitlisted in AOS/AET both at this time. If not either of those, perfectly fine with the base school. Sun will rise the next day!
In my view - The above 2 posts are a generalized ill informed opinion :
Irrespective of nationality/ethnicity - I think lot of parents who reject TJ or AOL do not do apply for self gratification . Most of the parents go by kids opinion/suggestion by teacher and apply for both schools knowing well that they have to reject either of one if the kids gets into both. Reason for that is they want to provide the kids options to choose from.
Every year There have been cases of kids who got into AOL and TJ but later changed mind to go to Base school for multitude of reasons..
You misunderstood. The poster is not suggesting that kids shouldn't apply to both TJ and AOL. They are referring to what parents did after decisions were made, boasting perennially about letting go of their TJ lottery offer.
Exactly! it is not about kids and choices. Its about parents trying to wash away their kids' hard work by saying that they only let go of TJ because it was hard or far or some other stupid reason. My general retort back to such an answer is "getting into TJ is not easy and your Kid busted their backside to get in and they got picked and all this while you could have saved them that rigor if you would have helped them understand that it was going to hard and it was going to be far and AOS/AET were anyways better. why make them go through the testing and prep.".... all i get back is indignant stares back!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do we need to send kids for trainings for these tests AOS/AET/TJ?
Ask your kid if they think they need some training brush up their skills.
Tests are only 1/4 of the criteria but mandatory part. If you feel kid is doing good but may need some refresher along the way then do it .
Make sure the training provider is not just gaming the test but concepts are well taught
Training for silly TJ essay is ridiculous. Prep is mostly for math, english and science to be successful after getting into high school whether TJ, AoL, or base school
Curie seems to do a good job of training kids for the essay.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do we need to send kids for trainings for these tests AOS/AET/TJ?
From what I've seen the last few years, AOS/AET is harder to get admitted, and top students get accepted, many of whom have not gotten training.
For TJ, there appears to be a bit of correlation. The top students I know who were admitted had gone to Curie, and the ones who did not get admitted did not go to Curie. This is 4v2 students, one of whom declined admission, out of 10 offers.
AOS/AET got harder due to the each school quota plus the lottery/ ranking of the kids and not for any other reason.
Have seen kids with way less stem test scores/ decent grades being accepted from one school and the better score/ excellent grades rejected from highly competitive schools in loudoun county
TJ on other hand makes it harder for one section of kids due to its diversity initiatives..