Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:25% low income? Oof, this is going to shift the schools budget from academics to social and welfare needs, you want to avoid schools with farms in the double digits.
There is definitely truth to this. It's unavoidable. They have to provide all those supports at school. That takes time and money.
Yep. And TJ, like most successful high schools both public and private, has long benefitted from very involved parent volunteers. Low income families are less likely to be able to provide that. Though I wonder if this number is artificially influenced by the fact that during covid ALL kids were eligible for FARMS, so some applicants may have checked that box following the letter but not spirit of the question...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We appreciate that your thread is about nothing so much as rubbing it in the face of kids who likely would have been admitted to TJ in the past that they've been turned away.
At the end of the day, the Post is a bastion of elitism. It's owned by a Princeton graduate, and the article was written by a Harvard graduate. They want to make sure that elite institutions continue to remain the focus of everyone's attention by admitting more URMs, so they retain their cachet.
It would be interesting if the Post did a follow-up story interviewing four kids who had exceptional credentials, but were denied admission to TJ and ended up at their base schools. Were they depressed and disappointed freshmen year? Or did they end up having a great freshmen year and feeling like it all worked out for the best? We'll never know because their stories won't be told by the Post. Hannah Natanson already knew she'd write this story from the moment the School Board started discussing changes to the TJ admissions process in 2020. If and when these four kids graduate from TJ in 2025, there will also be a sequel, but the experiences of the 96% of FCPS students who attend other high schools will continue to be ignored.
What? Qualified kids with exceptional credentials were turned away before the process change. This isn’t new.
+1
Only the kids who felt ENTITLED to a TJ education (because that’s what their parents tell them) would be “depressed and disappointed”.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I loved this article
To the parents who are frustrated at the number of mods who could handle TJ work but were turned away, wouldn’t it make more sense to lobby for creating another high school that has this level of challenge so all the capable kids can get the best possible public school education rather than figuring out who to deny this to? I’d love to see more schools raise their expectations so kids can get as far as they can go.
Yeah sure but we can’t even get a renovation for Mclean HS. A new HS will do nothing to help the very capable students who were rejected this year.
If they are capable of being successful at TJ, they will be successful wherever they go.
This.
There have always been capable student not accepted to TJ. Every year there are more applications then spots. And every year the kids who are not accepted attend their base schools or move to a private school. You are all acting like this is a new thing, it's not. You just don't like not getting a spot because a smart kid from a high FARMs school was accepted and your kid was not. And now you are bemoaning that there FARMs kids at TJ and how they won't be able to keep up because they don't have the money for tutoring.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I loved this article
To the parents who are frustrated at the number of mods who could handle TJ work but were turned away, wouldn’t it make more sense to lobby for creating another high school that has this level of challenge so all the capable kids can get the best possible public school education rather than figuring out who to deny this to? I’d love to see more schools raise their expectations so kids can get as far as they can go.
Yeah sure but we can’t even get a renovation for Mclean HS. A new HS will do nothing to help the very capable students who were rejected this year.
If they are capable of being successful at TJ, they will be successful wherever they go.
This.
There have always been capable student not accepted to TJ. Every year there are more applications then spots. And every year the kids who are not accepted attend their base schools or move to a private school. You are all acting like this is a new thing, it's not. You just don't like not getting a spot because a smart kid from a high FARMs school was accepted and your kid was not. And now you are bemoaning that there FARMs kids at TJ and how they won't be able to keep up because they don't have the money for tutoring.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I loved this article
To the parents who are frustrated at the number of mods who could handle TJ work but were turned away, wouldn’t it make more sense to lobby for creating another high school that has this level of challenge so all the capable kids can get the best possible public school education rather than figuring out who to deny this to? I’d love to see more schools raise their expectations so kids can get as far as they can go.
Yeah sure but we can’t even get a renovation for Mclean HS. A new HS will do nothing to help the very capable students who were rejected this year.
If they are capable of being successful at TJ, they will be successful wherever they go.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:While all 4 of the kids profiled are racial minorities, all of them seem to be middle class and not at or below the poverty line. Discussion of whether FARMS kids can succeed isn't relevant for this thread.
Oh no your assumptions are incorrect they were all low-income kids. Please stop making these false assumptions to spin your false narrative.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I loved this article
To the parents who are frustrated at the number of mods who could handle TJ work but were turned away, wouldn’t it make more sense to lobby for creating another high school that has this level of challenge so all the capable kids can get the best possible public school education rather than figuring out who to deny this to? I’d love to see more schools raise their expectations so kids can get as far as they can go.
Yeah sure but we can’t even get a renovation for Mclean HS. A new HS will do nothing to help the very capable students who were rejected this year.
Anonymous wrote:People care about tax spending. Rapes in schools, failure rates of minorities in virtual learning, inhibiting advanced math, and those get ignored but TJ gets changed without a 2-year notice???!!! The NAACP sued the school. We care because Braband doesn't make us feel like we have a say in the expenditure we are forced to pay. A better expenditure would be a second STEM magnet near Rachel-Carson.Anonymous wrote:Why do you all care about this so much?
Anonymous wrote:I loved this article
To the parents who are frustrated at the number of mods who could handle TJ work but were turned away, wouldn’t it make more sense to lobby for creating another high school that has this level of challenge so all the capable kids can get the best possible public school education rather than figuring out who to deny this to? I’d love to see more schools raise their expectations so kids can get as far as they can go.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:While all 4 of the kids profiled are racial minorities, all of them seem to be middle class and not at or below the poverty line. Discussion of whether FARMS kids can succeed isn't relevant for this thread.
Oh no your assumptions are incorrect they were all low-income kids. Please stop making these false assumptions to spin your false narrative.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:25% low income? Oof, this is going to shift the schools budget from academics to social and welfare needs, you want to avoid schools with farms in the double digits.
Wow. Didn’t even hesitate to say that out loud.
You should stay away from TJ. And any other FCPS school.
No good fcps school has farms of 25% or higher
BS. Stop sh1tting on schools with 10%+ FRL.
Anonymous wrote:People care about tax spending. Rapes in schools, failure rates of minorities in virtual learning, inhibiting advanced math, and those get ignored but TJ gets changed without a 2-year notice???!!! The NAACP sued the school. We care because Braband doesn't make us feel like we have a say in the expenditure we are forced to pay. A better expenditure would be a second STEM magnet near Rachel-Carson.Anonymous wrote:Why do you all care about this so much?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:25% low income? Oof, this is going to shift the schools budget from academics to social and welfare needs, you want to avoid schools with farms in the double digits.
Wow. Didn’t even hesitate to say that out loud.
You should stay away from TJ. And any other FCPS school.
No good fcps school has farms of 25% or higher
BS. Stop sh1tting on schools with 10%+ FRL.