Anonymous wrote:It's doubtful there are many private school kids in the neighborhoods that feed into TJ. The best and the brightest attend AAP public school not private.
Actually, international childhood is the new norm.Anonymous wrote:
I'm talking about a nation of people where it's not considered "strange" to be able to recite the top 10 US World and News rankings of schools in another country and where people are willing to move their kids to another country whose language they don't speak and separate families for the sake of your child's education. Not college but high school and earlier. Crazy. .
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^No I don't. Enlighten me.
Ass
So what's bothering you more: The fact that a free public magnet program provides a better education than a 30K + private school, your kid does not have a chance in hell of getting into TJ since it's all based on merit or that there are people who move their families from another country so that their kid can attend TJ?
Don't pretend to be innocent. It was your little swipe about how Americans don't care about education. It wasn't just a swipe, it was a lie, because it's manifestly untrue. I agree, you're an ass.
Anonymous wrote:We were told at orientation that most private school students decline TJ. Lots of different reasons.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^No I don't. Enlighten me.
Ass
So what's bothering you more: The fact that a free public magnet program provides a better education than a 30K + private school, your kid does not have a chance in hell of getting into TJ since it's all based on merit or that there are people who move their families from another country so that their kid can attend TJ?
Anonymous wrote:Who the hell care what a bunch of Koreans think? They are not going to be the connections you child needs or wants to get into a great college or law or med school or get a job after college. One of the things you send your child to Sidwell or STA for us the connections and network they will have available to them for the rest of their lives.[/quot
Does anyone have the stats? If the whole point of going to private is to get the connections that lead to placements in top universities, then students from privates should be accepted to better schools than TJ students. I don't believe that is the case. Also I private is more challenging wouldn't they have better test scores. Again I don't believe they do.
Comparing the Korean immigrants with the students who would attend one of the exclusive privates is not a fair comparison. Those students are TJ or local high school or back on the boat to Korea.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^No I don't. Enlighten me.
Ass
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some of you seem to think, or want to think, that TJ kids do nothing but math and science and have no exposure to english, languages, or the arts. That's not true, or fair. I'm not that familiar with TJ, but I am familiar with the Blair magnet. The kids take about 3 math/science/computer science classes a semester. The other classes are the high-level english, history and elective classes any other high school student takes. By junior or senior year, most of the english and other electives are APs. So while magnets can have intensive science and math, they are as "well rounded" as any other school when it comes to non-magnet classes.
Yes, our babysitter went ot Blair. dental hygenist. She said when classes change there are so many in the halls it took the whole time to push through to your class. Housekeeper chose to pupil place at Whitman instead. (worked in Bethesda).
Anonymous wrote:Some of you seem to think, or want to think, that TJ kids do nothing but math and science and have no exposure to english, languages, or the arts. That's not true, or fair. I'm not that familiar with TJ, but I am familiar with the Blair magnet. The kids take about 3 math/science/computer science classes a semester. The other classes are the high-level english, history and elective classes any other high school student takes. By junior or senior year, most of the english and other electives are APs. So while magnets can have intensive science and math, they are as "well rounded" as any other school when it comes to non-magnet classes.
Anonymous wrote:^No I don't. Enlighten me.
Ass