Anonymous wrote:Eh. Most families zoned to Yorktown would agree the top kids from middle school end up disproportionately at WL. Not all of course. Some of Yorktown’s success in college apps is academic and some is (far more than WL) athletics. Look at signing day details for YHS. Athletic recruits to top schools. The 3 high schools have very different flavors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eh. Most families zoned to Yorktown would agree the top kids from middle school end up disproportionately at WL. Not all of course. Some of Yorktown’s success in college apps is academic and some is (far more than WL) athletics. Look at signing day details for YHS. Athletic recruits to top schools. The 3 high schools have very different flavors.
Nonsense. You can see where the athletes sign. It’s not MIT. I know these kids are they are equally distributed. To say the smart ones are going to W&L is a bunch of utter BS.
Smart ones are going private.
I do t have the info in front of me but I thought there were several athletic recruits to ivies and top 25 schools at YHS. Maybe I’m wrong. Don’t get me wrong. I don’t think athletic recruits are the standard. But there are more from YHS than the other schools. And at better schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eh. Most families zoned to Yorktown would agree the top kids from middle school end up disproportionately at WL. Not all of course. Some of Yorktown’s success in college apps is academic and some is (far more than WL) athletics. Look at signing day details for YHS. Athletic recruits to top schools. The 3 high schools have very different flavors.
Nonsense. You can see where the athletes sign. It’s not MIT. I know these kids are they are equally distributed. To say the smart ones are going to W&L is a bunch of utter BS.
Smart ones are going private.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eh. Most families zoned to Yorktown would agree the top kids from middle school end up disproportionately at WL. Not all of course. Some of Yorktown’s success in college apps is academic and some is (far more than WL) athletics. Look at signing day details for YHS. Athletic recruits to top schools. The 3 high schools have very different flavors.
Nonsense. You can see where the athletes sign. It’s not MIT. I know these kids are they are equally distributed. To say the smart ones are going to W&L is a bunch of utter BS.
Anonymous wrote:Eh. Most families zoned to Yorktown would agree the top kids from middle school end up disproportionately at WL. Not all of course. Some of Yorktown’s success in college apps is academic and some is (far more than WL) athletics. Look at signing day details for YHS. Athletic recruits to top schools. The 3 high schools have very different flavors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one will drive that you have better odds of getting into uva from Wakefield. Less competition, for one thing.
PP here. The UVA/Top Ten numbers are W&L and Yorktown. To rebut the statement that that the smart Yorktown students are departing in droves for W&L. See bolded statement. Perhaps that was a typo and you did not mean YHS?
Totally agree that Wakefield is different for the socioeconomic reasons already discussed. Their UVA/other numbers reflect this. But, totally agree that for some kids big fish/small pond works great.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are looking at homes in WL and Yorktown and came across an article in ArlNow they added 600 seats to WL to bump the capacity to 2700, but Yorktown is capped at 2100 because of something with its lot coverage?
When they added those 600 seats, did they add another cafeteria, and build more field space? I have no idea how common space would be reallocated but I guess they did it last year and it seems to be working well? Any current parents want to share how it is at a nearly 3000 student school?
The new academic building that opened last year has spacious, state-of-the-art common spaces on each floor with plenty of natural light. The largest is on the first level and can be used for larger gatherings. These spaces have moveable furniture for any number of activities. There are also fitness and weight rooms in the new building.
The auditorium and gym (opened about 15 years ago) are the largest of the APS high schools. They were designed based on old specs created for the former W-L building (now demolished) that originally housed about 3000 plus students.
Students can spend lunch period throughout the campus (except on the football field), and both the new and old buildings have outdoor terraces with furniture. Seniors have open campus privileges and can leave campus for lunch. Some walk to fast food options in nearby Ballston, others drive to grab food, some walk home and back.
Anonymous wrote:Eh. There’s definitely a difference among the types of kids getting into uva from those three high schools. Even if the numbers are equivalent. Your commitment to the Arlington mantra of equity is admirable. But, It will depend a lot of your kids’ profile whether they get in from Wakefield or WL. I’ll leave it at that.
Anonymous wrote:No one will drive that you have better odds of getting into uva from Wakefield. Less competition, for one thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Notwithstanding all the defensive drama from the Wakefield crowd, it’s pretty well accepted in N Arlington that WL ends up picking off the more intense students from the YHS district. More motivated seems like a fine phrase to me. Either intrinsically Or extrinsically. I am sure the same is true for Wakefield. But not all those kids are driven my crazy parents. Honestly, APS doesn’t really have many of those parents period.
No one will argue that you probably have better odds of getting into uva from Wakefield. Less competition, for one thing.
Each school averages an identical acceptance rate at UVA consistently over the past five years. Indeed the numbers are almost identical.
Each school has about the same acceptance rate at USNWR Top Ten consistently over the past five years.
Now, these are dumb metrics for picking the right school for your son/daughter. BUT, no one reading this board should be under the misimpression that PP has a clue what they are talking about. They do not.
Anonymous wrote:Notwithstanding all the defensive drama from the Wakefield crowd, it’s pretty well accepted in N Arlington that WL ends up picking off the more intense students from the YHS district. More motivated seems like a fine phrase to me. Either intrinsically Or extrinsically. I am sure the same is true for Wakefield. But not all those kids are driven my crazy parents. Honestly, APS doesn’t really have many of those parents period.