Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I graduated from Yorktown many years ago (early 2000s), we always had a slew of Ivy League/Ivy equivalent (Stanford/MIT/Duke/Chicago) admissions. What has happened? I just moved back to North Arlington. Has Yorktown gone downhill?
You're misremembering. It wasn't a "slew" back then, either -- it was more like a handful. It was always UVA or Bust.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In 2019-20, Yorktown sent 209 kids to W-L but W-L only sent 45 kids to Yorktown. It's fair to assume most were transferring for IB and would have been among the top students at Yorktown had they stayed. APS stacks the deck in favor of W-L at the expense of Yorktown and Wakefield.
It doesn't stack the deck anymore than TJ stacks the deck at the expense of McLean and Langley. It's an option, that's all. Plenty of smart in boundary kids choose to stay at Yorktown and go the AP route.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because there’s no reason to transfer to YHS or WHS. Every APS school has AP classes so w-l kids wouldn’t need or want to transfer to yhs.
There may not be an academic program to transfer to Yorktown for; but Wakefield does have the AP Capstone program. And some have transferred for that.
Anonymous wrote:Because there’s no reason to transfer to YHS or WHS. Every APS school has AP classes so w-l kids wouldn’t need or want to transfer to yhs.
Anonymous wrote:In 2019-20, Yorktown sent 209 kids to W-L but W-L only sent 45 kids to Yorktown. It's fair to assume most were transferring for IB and would have been among the top students at Yorktown had they stayed. APS stacks the deck in favor of W-L at the expense of Yorktown and Wakefield.
Anonymous wrote: APS stacks the deck in favor of W-L at the expense of Yorktown and Wakefield.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In 2019-20, Yorktown sent 209 kids to W-L but W-L only sent 45 kids to Yorktown. It's fair to assume most were transferring for IB and would have been among the top students at Yorktown had they stayed. APS stacks the deck in favor of W-L at the expense of Yorktown and Wakefield.
Where is your data? I don't think this is necessarily true. There are plenty of top students at all 3 schools. And if you look at the number of true IB graduates at W-L, there are plenty of kids who end up back at WHS or WLHS when they decide they don't want to put in the work of the IB classes. Which W-L students can pick and choose if they want to pursue since that's their neighborhood school.
Anonymous wrote:In 2019-20, Yorktown sent 209 kids to W-L but W-L only sent 45 kids to Yorktown. It's fair to assume most were transferring for IB and would have been among the top students at Yorktown had they stayed. APS stacks the deck in favor of W-L at the expense of Yorktown and Wakefield.
Anonymous wrote:“Recruited athletes”? Is that really a thing — it’s a neighborhood highschool.
Anonymous wrote:Can kids from Yorktown and Wakefield apply for IB at WL? Is it based on MS grades? Just curious how hard it is to get a spot.