Anonymous wrote:
In my view, the academic "super stars" are members of STA's Cum Laude Society (academic honorary). Of the 16 members in '08 who were inducted, 7 of the 16 were Beauvoir alum. Many of its members were also '08 National Merit semifinalists. Again, unclear when the other members (9) were admitted at STA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The 4th grade class is mostly Beauvoir alums. But by the time they're in high school, many more boys have been admitted to the class, so by then they may be only a quarter of the class.
What percentage of Beauvoir alums typically drop out (for whatever reason) before graduating 8 years down the road?
Based upon '08's graduating class there were only 18 Beauvoir alum remaining out of the roughly 30 that entered in c form. Of that 18, 33% became National Merit semifinalists. There were 75 graduates in the 2008 class, 24% of them were Beauvoir alum.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hope NCS families are nicer than this.
Hate to crush the hope. But mean families = mean girls.
Come on! Mean families and mean girls exist everywhere, from the trailor trash girls at my public school growing up, to the snooty elitist prep school girls that I went to college with! Seriously, you can't stereotype a whole school for goodness sakes! (BTW I am not a NCS parent).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The 4th grade class is mostly Beauvoir alums. But by the time they're in high school, many more boys have been admitted to the class, so by then they may be only a quarter of the class.
What percentage of Beauvoir alums typically drop out (for whatever reason) before graduating 8 years down the road?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hope NCS families are nicer than this.
Hate to crush the hope. But mean families = mean girls.
Anonymous wrote:The 4th grade class is mostly Beauvoir alums. But by the time they're in high school, many more boys have been admitted to the class, so by then they may be only a quarter of the class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Could it be that the non-Beauvoir boys coming into St. Albans have higher math scores because the admissions committee can be more selective in choosing them? It's pretty hard to tell (at the K level) who is going to be an academic superstar (and yes, while St. Albans can reject some Beauvoir students, they do seem to accept most of them). It becomes easier at the 4th grade level, and probably progressively easier on up through the grades. It would be interesting to look at St. Albans' top tenth percentile and figure out when they were admitted. Just a thought.....
I think you got it! The range in performance comes from the Beauvoir boys and they cherry pick the "best" from other schools. Therefore many Beauvoir boys look poorly prepared relatively. Most National Merit Semi-finalists come from the LS and of that majority half start in 4th. Some of the strongest came from Beauvoir! Look it up!
2008, 6 out 10 of the National Merit semifinalists from STA are Beauvoir alum. Unclear when the remaining 4 on the list were admitted at STA. There were two finalists in '08 one was a Beauvoir alum and the other a non-Beauvoirian.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Could it be that the non-Beauvoir boys coming into St. Albans have higher math scores because the admissions committee can be more selective in choosing them? It's pretty hard to tell (at the K level) who is going to be an academic superstar (and yes, while St. Albans can reject some Beauvoir students, they do seem to accept most of them). It becomes easier at the 4th grade level, and probably progressively easier on up through the grades. It would be interesting to look at St. Albans' top tenth percentile and figure out when they were admitted. Just a thought.....
I think you got it! The range in performance comes from the Beauvoir boys and they cherry pick the "best" from other schools. Therefore many Beauvoir boys look poorly prepared relatively. Most National Merit Semi-finalists come from the LS and of that majority half start in 4th. Some of the strongest came from Beauvoir! Look it up!
2008, 6 out 10 of the National Merit semifinalists from STA are Beauvoir alum. Unclear when the remaining 4 on the list were admitted at STA. There were two finalists in '08 one was a Beauvoir alum and the other a non-Beauvoirian.
In my view, the academic "super stars" are members of STA's Cum Laude Society (academic honorary). Of the 16 members in '08 who were inducted, 7 of the 16 were Beauvoir alum. Many of its members were also '08 National Merit semifinalists. Again, unclear when the other members (9) were admitted at STA.
Anonymous wrote:I hope NCS families are nicer than this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Could it be that the non-Beauvoir boys coming into St. Albans have higher math scores because the admissions committee can be more selective in choosing them? It's pretty hard to tell (at the K level) who is going to be an academic superstar (and yes, while St. Albans can reject some Beauvoir students, they do seem to accept most of them). It becomes easier at the 4th grade level, and probably progressively easier on up through the grades. It would be interesting to look at St. Albans' top tenth percentile and figure out when they were admitted. Just a thought.....
I think you got it! The range in performance comes from the Beauvoir boys and they cherry pick the "best" from other schools. Therefore many Beauvoir boys look poorly prepared relatively. Most National Merit Semi-finalists come from the LS and of that majority half start in 4th. Some of the strongest came from Beauvoir! Look it up!
2008, 6 out 10 of the National Merit semifinalists from STA are Beauvoir alum. Unclear when the remaining 4 on the list were admitted at STA. There were two finalists in '08 one was a Beauvoir alum and the other a non-Beauvoirian.