Anonymous wrote:I heard some schools have their own honors programs. What are those called and are they run by the principals or does MCPS have some standard criteria for how they should work?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought they said they were aiming for an incoming class of about 125 students at the open house in the spring.
Are you maybe thinking of Eastern? They went from 100 to 125 this year.
Nope, never been there but maybe they were saying they wished they could get to that number.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought they said they were aiming for an incoming class of about 125 students at the open house in the spring.
Are you maybe thinking of Eastern? They went from 100 to 125 this year.
Anonymous wrote:My DC said to me that Blair STEM magnet kids are really smart but socially awkward.
DC said RMIB kids tend to be more well rounded -- smart in STEM as well as great writers, and they are all involved in various different types of outside activities, not just STEM related.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In the Choice report they refer to Blair science math as a "magnet" but they say CAP is an "application" program. What is the difference?
MCPS now prefers to call all these programs "criteria based."
https://www2.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/curriculum/specialprograms/admissions/
The magnets draw students from well beyond the school's service area, while CAP, LTI, etc are more limited to DCC students.
Uh oh. Blair SMACS builds its whole identity around being "The Magnet"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In the Choice report they refer to Blair science math as a "magnet" but they say CAP is an "application" program. What is the difference?
MCPS now prefers to call all these programs "criteria based."
https://www2.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/curriculum/specialprograms/admissions/
The magnets draw students from well beyond the school's service area, while CAP, LTI, etc are more limited to DCC students.
Anonymous wrote:I thought they said they were aiming for an incoming class of about 125 students at the open house in the spring.
Anonymous wrote:My guess would be around 45-50%. They increased the number of seats either this year or last year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not exactly “personalities” but there are some very obvious demographic differences between CAP (largely upper middle class, white students) and magnet (many from Indian, Chinese, Korean and other Asian backgrounds often children of immigrants including the few who are white) at Blair. Nice kids either way.
Why is this? Why are there so few wealthy white families in SMCS relative to CAP, and why so many in CAP? Are the upper middle class white kids not as good in STEM or are their families less interested?
Both Blair magnet and CAP are predominantly UMC. This is not NYC, where the test-in magnets are dominated by working class first-generation kids whose parents work in restaurants and dry cleaners. The parents of both sets of kids tend to be feds, or journalists, or attorneys, or scientists, or college professors.
I have an upperclassman in CAP who attended the TPMS STEM magnet, so some visibility on both groups and while Blair magnet does have more first and second generation immigrant kids, they are just as wealthy or wealthier than the CAP kids.
Agree only the wealthiest families can afford to prep their kids sufficiently to get into these programs. I'm told it takes years of AoPS or RM to get to where one might have a shot at SMCS.
I know just go to the AoPS center and Gaithersburg and you can meet next year's SMCS students.
You sound like an ad. The stuff they teach there is easy to teach yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not exactly “personalities” but there are some very obvious demographic differences between CAP (largely upper middle class, white students) and magnet (many from Indian, Chinese, Korean and other Asian backgrounds often children of immigrants including the few who are white) at Blair. Nice kids either way.
Why is this? Why are there so few wealthy white families in SMCS relative to CAP, and why so many in CAP? Are the upper middle class white kids not as good in STEM or are their families less interested?
Both Blair magnet and CAP are predominantly UMC. This is not NYC, where the test-in magnets are dominated by working class first-generation kids whose parents work in restaurants and dry cleaners. The parents of both sets of kids tend to be feds, or journalists, or attorneys, or scientists, or college professors.
I have an upperclassman in CAP who attended the TPMS STEM magnet, so some visibility on both groups and while Blair magnet does have more first and second generation immigrant kids, they are just as wealthy or wealthier than the CAP kids.
Agree only the wealthiest families can afford to prep their kids sufficiently to get into these programs. I'm told it takes years of AoPS or RM to get to where one might have a shot at SMCS.
I know just go to the AoPS center and Gaithersburg and you can meet next year's SMCS students.