Anonymous wrote:If you are an underrepresented group, you have a significant leg-up in the selection criteria. They try to have a healthy mix of experiences and backgrounds otherwise you get a group of students who are basically all the same and don't really challenge each other in enough ways.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"I guess you could try moving to a cohort-less ES,...."
This will be the only winning strategy. A 99% kid in the W cluster will not get in. A 99% or even just 97% kid in the Rockville HS cluster ES would definitely get in CES.
This is not the winning strategy. My 99% kid didn’t get in and we’re not in a W cluster.
But do you live in Rockville?
DP. We do; however, my 99% kid who didn't get in is in a W cluster.. My bad, should have moved to Twinbrook ES catchment area..
But, jokes apart, you can't be serious! Who on Earth is buying and selling - and moving into rentals - just to get into MoCo's "enriched" programs? If you have the money to pull all that s--t off, just send your child to private and save yourself the grief.
I know people who are purposely renting in a district with a local CES.
Of course it matters. Simply because the general curriculum (even the honored class in MS) is by no means or intention to fit for the needs of the 1% student. The teachers are trained to not encourage enrichment. So a bunch of 1% students still have to stay bored all day long. Personal experience.
CES only really matters if your child needs to opt out of their local environment because of low peers. It is an opt out for too many poor kids, it isn’t some automatic transformative life altering experience. If your kids already has lots of 1% around them who cares.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"I guess you could try moving to a cohort-less ES,...."
This will be the only winning strategy. A 99% kid in the W cluster will not get in. A 99% or even just 97% kid in the Rockville HS cluster ES would definitely get in CES.
This is not the winning strategy. My 99% kid didn’t get in and we’re not in a W cluster.
But do you live in Rockville?
DP. We do; however, my 99% kid who didn't get in is in a W cluster.. My bad, should have moved to Twinbrook ES catchment area..
But, jokes apart, you can't be serious! Who on Earth is buying and selling - and moving into rentals - just to get into MoCo's "enriched" programs? If you have the money to pull all that s--t off, just send your child to private and save yourself the grief.
I know people who are purposely renting in a district with a local CES.
CES only really matters if your child needs to opt out of their local environment because of low peers. It is an opt out for too many poor kids, it isn’t some automatic transformative life altering experience. If your kids already has lots of 1% around them who cares.
Nonsense! There's 1% and the 0.1%.
Our DC is at a regional CES, coming from what we consider to be an excellent ES. It's a more rigorous, challenging curriculum, although there isn't necessarily more homework (actually, there's not a lot of homework at all). From our perspective, it's a better program for our DC, but it's still a bunch of 10 year olds who can have varying attention spans, behavioral issues, fixation on Fortnite (boys, at least), etc. For anyone who thinks it is a bunch of young Einsteins running around, it isn't. (Yes, I'm sure some of these kids are the 0.1%, but that's not even a significant minority.) We consider our DC fortunate to be there, but I think too many parents here fixate on the CES program. Great if you DC is selected, but, really (and especially for all theses W cluster parents), the ES' in this area are really good, too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"I guess you could try moving to a cohort-less ES,...."
This will be the only winning strategy. A 99% kid in the W cluster will not get in. A 99% or even just 97% kid in the Rockville HS cluster ES would definitely get in CES.
This is not the winning strategy. My 99% kid didn’t get in and we’re not in a W cluster.
But do you live in Rockville?
DP. We do; however, my 99% kid who didn't get in is in a W cluster.. My bad, should have moved to Twinbrook ES catchment area..
But, jokes apart, you can't be serious! Who on Earth is buying and selling - and moving into rentals - just to get into MoCo's "enriched" programs? If you have the money to pull all that s--t off, just send your child to private and save yourself the grief.
I know people who are purposely renting in a district with a local CES.
CES only really matters if your child needs to opt out of their local environment because of low peers. It is an opt out for too many poor kids, it isn’t some automatic transformative life altering experience. If your kids already has lots of 1% around them who cares.
Nonsense! There's 1% and the 0.1%.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"I guess you could try moving to a cohort-less ES,...."
This will be the only winning strategy. A 99% kid in the W cluster will not get in. A 99% or even just 97% kid in the Rockville HS cluster ES would definitely get in CES.
This is not the winning strategy. My 99% kid didn’t get in and we’re not in a W cluster.
But do you live in Rockville?
DP. We do; however, my 99% kid who didn't get in is in a W cluster.. My bad, should have moved to Twinbrook ES catchment area..
But, jokes apart, you can't be serious! Who on Earth is buying and selling - and moving into rentals - just to get into MoCo's "enriched" programs? If you have the money to pull all that s--t off, just send your child to private and save yourself the grief.
I know people who are purposely renting in a district with a local CES.
CES only really matters if your child needs to opt out of their local environment because of low peers. It is an opt out for too many poor kids, it isn’t some automatic transformative life altering experience. If your kids already has lots of 1% around them who cares.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"I guess you could try moving to a cohort-less ES,...."
This will be the only winning strategy. A 99% kid in the W cluster will not get in. A 99% or even just 97% kid in the Rockville HS cluster ES would definitely get in CES.
This is not the winning strategy. My 99% kid didn’t get in and we’re not in a W cluster.
But do you live in Rockville?
DP. We do; however, my 99% kid who didn't get in is in a W cluster.. My bad, should have moved to Twinbrook ES catchment area..
But, jokes apart, you can't be serious! Who on Earth is buying and selling - and moving into rentals - just to get into MoCo's "enriched" programs? If you have the money to pull all that s--t off, just send your child to private and save yourself the grief.
I know people who are purposely renting in a district with a local CES.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"I guess you could try moving to a cohort-less ES,...."
This will be the only winning strategy. A 99% kid in the W cluster will not get in. A 99% or even just 97% kid in the Rockville HS cluster ES would definitely get in CES.
This is not the winning strategy. My 99% kid didn’t get in and we’re not in a W cluster.
But do you live in Rockville?
DP. We do; however, my 99% kid who didn't get in is in a W cluster.. My bad, should have moved to Twinbrook ES catchment area..
But, jokes apart, you can't be serious! Who on Earth is buying and selling - and moving into rentals - just to get into MoCo's "enriched" programs? If you have the money to pull all that s--t off, just send your child to private and save yourself the grief.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"I guess you could try moving to a cohort-less ES,...."
This will be the only winning strategy. A 99% kid in the W cluster will not get in. A 99% or even just 97% kid in the Rockville HS cluster ES would definitely get in CES.
This is not the winning strategy. My 99% kid didn’t get in and we’re not in a W cluster.
But do you live in Rockville?
DP. We do; however, my 99% kid who didn't get in is in a W cluster.. My bad, should have moved to Twinbrook ES catchment area..
But, jokes apart, you can't be serious! Who on Earth is buying and selling - and moving into rentals - just to get into MoCo's "enriched" programs? If you have the money to pull all that s--t off, just send your child to private and save yourself the grief.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"I guess you could try moving to a cohort-less ES,...."
This will be the only winning strategy. A 99% kid in the W cluster will not get in. A 99% or even just 97% kid in the Rockville HS cluster ES would definitely get in CES.
This is not the winning strategy. My 99% kid didn’t get in and we’re not in a W cluster.
But do you live in Rockville?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"I guess you could try moving to a cohort-less ES,...."
This will be the only winning strategy. A 99% kid in the W cluster will not get in. A 99% or even just 97% kid in the Rockville HS cluster ES would definitely get in CES.
This is not the winning strategy. My 99% kid didn’t get in and we’re not in a W cluster.
Anonymous wrote:"I guess you could try moving to a cohort-less ES,...."
This will be the only winning strategy. A 99% kid in the W cluster will not get in. A 99% or even just 97% kid in the Rockville HS cluster ES would definitely get in CES.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any idea which grades are used to determine selection?
Do they look at grades for the 1st and 2nd marking period or does it include the 3rd or interim grades for 3rd?
Do some grades matter more than others i.e. Does a B in music matter less than one in social studies or reading?
I'm guessing there isn't a way to know this but thought I'd put this out there.
My DC who normally gets straight A's somehow got a B in one of the reading categories in Q2 of 3rd grade, but still managed to get in because of very high MAP-R and CogAT scores. Nobody knows what exactly they look at for grades or how it's weighted.
Whereas my kid got in with straights As but a lower CogAT score than seems to be the norm (based on what is being self-reported here on DCUM). My hypothesis is that the lower CogAT score was overlooked because the overall score was brought down by the quantitative portion of the test and the CES is meant to be a language-rich program.
Basically, there is no secret recipe for guaranteed admission.