Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It looks like they greatly expanded the "considered" pool for the lottery in order to get their desired demographics. For the CESes they considered 11,446 students. Isn't that almost every child in that grade? The same goes for middle schools where the "considered" pool was almost double what it was in previous years. Does anyone have an explanation for how this happened and why this was done in such secrecy?
https://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/uploadedFiles/departments/schoolchoice/210818%20CES%20Secondary%20App%20Prog%20Admission%20Results.pdf
I heard they're lowering the cutoff to 80% this year! They're so sneaky!
The actual rumor is they're lowering it by 5% per year and this is just the beginning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It looks like they greatly expanded the "considered" pool for the lottery in order to get their desired demographics. For the CESes they considered 11,446 students. Isn't that almost every child in that grade? The same goes for middle schools where the "considered" pool was almost double what it was in previous years. Does anyone have an explanation for how this happened and why this was done in such secrecy?
https://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/uploadedFiles/departments/schoolchoice/210818%20CES%20Secondary%20App%20Prog%20Admission%20Results.pdf
I heard they're lowering the cutoff to 80% this year! They're so sneaky!
The actual rumor is they're lowering it by 5% per year and this is just the beginning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This whole thread is depressing, and none of the kids are winning except the white ones.
Don't fret. There won't be any white kids in MCPS in 10 years.
Now THAT would be interesting. I actually worked in a charter school in the south where the white students hung out with each other, and the majority of students of color (Black, Indian) collectively self-segregated - thinking about it, I only knew of a handful of Hispanic or Asian students, but they hung out with white kids. In my 6 high school math classes, the Indian AND Black students outperformed my white students with ease, and I wholly attribute it to the fact that their parents worked with teachers instead of pulling the special snowflake bullshit. I didn't have any Hispanic students in my class and the one Asian student I had did terribly, I truly believe because she was trying to fit in with the white kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It looks like they greatly expanded the "considered" pool for the lottery in order to get their desired demographics. For the CESes they considered 11,446 students. Isn't that almost every child in that grade? The same goes for middle schools where the "considered" pool was almost double what it was in previous years. Does anyone have an explanation for how this happened and why this was done in such secrecy?
https://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/uploadedFiles/departments/schoolchoice/210818%20CES%20Secondary%20App%20Prog%20Admission%20Results.pdf
I heard they're lowering the cutoff to 80% this year! They're so sneaky!
Anonymous wrote:It looks like they greatly expanded the "considered" pool for the lottery in order to get their desired demographics. For the CESes they considered 11,446 students. Isn't that almost every child in that grade? The same goes for middle schools where the "considered" pool was almost double what it was in previous years. Does anyone have an explanation for how this happened and why this was done in such secrecy?
https://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/uploadedFiles/departments/schoolchoice/210818%20CES%20Secondary%20App%20Prog%20Admission%20Results.pdf
Anonymous wrote:It looks like they greatly expanded the "considered" pool for the lottery in order to get their desired demographics. For the CESes they considered 11,446 students. Isn't that almost every child in that grade? The same goes for middle schools where the "considered" pool was almost double what it was in previous years. Does anyone have an explanation for how this happened and why this was done in such secrecy?
https://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/uploadedFiles/departments/schoolchoice/210818%20CES%20Secondary%20App%20Prog%20Admission%20Results.pdf
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This whole thread is depressing, and none of the kids are winning except the white ones.
Don't fret. There won't be any white kids in MCPS in 10 years.
I love all these drama queen posts.
I used to work for a woman who's very involved in moco conservative politics and this was basically her lament. It was creepy and sad and I'm so glad I don't work for her anymore.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The best option would be to combine both. The Magnet program automatically admits, for example, all 98-99+ percentile children on a Merit basis; but also adds, say X slots on an 85th percentile "equity" basis.
I agree with this suggestion. I believe they are no longer able use race as a category (right? can someone more knowledgeable correct me if I'm wrong?), but I wonder why they can't do this with FARMS status.
If you are 85% and FARMS you're in. If you're non-FARMS, you need to be in 99+ percentile. Why can't they do that?
It's always been illegal to use race as a criterion. That's why the process is race blind.
Prior to the late 90s, race could be considered in requesting transfers to schools to take advantage of special programs. MCPS switched to FARMS as a proxy of race in response to these lawsuits in the late 90s.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The best option would be to combine both. The Magnet program automatically admits, for example, all 98-99+ percentile children on a Merit basis; but also adds, say X slots on an 85th percentile "equity" basis.
I agree with this suggestion. I believe they are no longer able use race as a category (right? can someone more knowledgeable correct me if I'm wrong?), but I wonder why they can't do this with FARMS status.
If you are 85% and FARMS you're in. If you're non-FARMS, you need to be in 99+ percentile. Why can't they do that?
It's always been illegal to use race as a criterion. That's why the process is race blind.
Prior to the late 90s, race could be considered in requesting transfers to schools to take advantage of special programs. MCPS switched to FARMS as a proxy of race in response to these lawsuits in the late 90s.
I find that very hard to believe because it was illegal then too. Can you provide any evidence to support this or is this just more misinformation and propaganda?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The best option would be to combine both. The Magnet program automatically admits, for example, all 98-99+ percentile children on a Merit basis; but also adds, say X slots on an 85th percentile "equity" basis.
I agree with this suggestion. I believe they are no longer able use race as a category (right? can someone more knowledgeable correct me if I'm wrong?), but I wonder why they can't do this with FARMS status.
If you are 85% and FARMS you're in. If you're non-FARMS, you need to be in 99+ percentile. Why can't they do that?
It's always been illegal to use race as a criterion. That's why the process is race blind.
Prior to the late 90s, race could be considered in requesting transfers to schools to take advantage of special programs. MCPS switched to FARMS as a proxy of race in response to these lawsuits in the late 90s.
I find that very hard to believe because it was illegal then too. Can you provide any evidence to support this or is this just more misinformation and propaganda?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This whole thread is depressing, and none of the kids are winning except the white ones.
Don't fret. There won't be any white kids in MCPS in 10 years.
I love all these drama queen posts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The best option would be to combine both. The Magnet program automatically admits, for example, all 98-99+ percentile children on a Merit basis; but also adds, say X slots on an 85th percentile "equity" basis.
I agree with this suggestion. I believe they are no longer able use race as a category (right? can someone more knowledgeable correct me if I'm wrong?), but I wonder why they can't do this with FARMS status.
If you are 85% and FARMS you're in. If you're non-FARMS, you need to be in 99+ percentile. Why can't they do that?
It's always been illegal to use race as a criterion. That's why the process is race blind.
Prior to the late 90s, race could be considered in requesting transfers to schools to take advantage of special programs. MCPS switched to FARMS as a proxy of race in response to these lawsuits in the late 90s.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The best option would be to combine both. The Magnet program automatically admits, for example, all 98-99+ percentile children on a Merit basis; but also adds, say X slots on an 85th percentile "equity" basis.
I agree with this suggestion. I believe they are no longer able use race as a category (right? can someone more knowledgeable correct me if I'm wrong?), but I wonder why they can't do this with FARMS status.
If you are 85% and FARMS you're in. If you're non-FARMS, you need to be in 99+ percentile. Why can't they do that?
It's always been illegal to use race as a criterion. That's why the process is race blind.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This whole thread is depressing, and none of the kids are winning except the white ones.
Don't fret. There won't be any white kids in MCPS in 10 years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The best option would be to combine both. The Magnet program automatically admits, for example, all 98-99+ percentile children on a Merit basis; but also adds, say X slots on an 85th percentile "equity" basis.
I agree with this suggestion. I believe they are no longer able use race as a category (right? can someone more knowledgeable correct me if I'm wrong?), but I wonder why they can't do this with FARMS status.
If you are 85% and FARMS you're in. If you're non-FARMS, you need to be in 99+ percentile. Why can't they do that?