Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Picking up on another thread, how many of those kids received extra time on the tests?
Are you wondering because you want to give extra applause to kids that still score high despite having to overcome learning or other disabilities?
So well said. More of you please.
Any one who believes parents are manipulating the system are criminally stupid.
The last thing a child with normal processing speed is going to do is slog through 50% more test time.
The utter disregard for special needs students in mcps has reached critical levels. Certain schools have principals and counselors who are literal law breakers and very proud of it. Somethings going to give very soon.
Anonymous wrote:Meh, Centennial and River Hill in Howard are both higher than Walt Whitman.
Guess money doesn't guarantee everything.
Anonymous wrote:OP knew what he was doing. He was just trolling all the insane Blair parents.Anonymous wrote:This post didn't go as well as the OP intended, huh?
Anonymous wrote:Meh, Centennial and River Hill in Howard are both higher than Walt Whitman.
Guess money doesn't guarantee everything.
Anonymous wrote:The participants from Whitman are significantly less than other schools. More than PHS. But PHS is a much smaller school. Why?
Anonymous wrote:tutor here. I can improve student scores by 300 points if you give me $$ and 6-12 weeks.
Guess which school is the wealthiest in MoCo and thus has the greatest number of kids who receive tutoring?
In fact, Whitman has an in school semester long SAT/ACT program. I don't think it's great quality, but something like that is certainly possible to bump most people's scores by 100 points.
Blair has a lot of NMSQT students because they have a lot of students who got into the math/science magnet by testing well, so obviously they test well on other instruments like the SAT. Also the Blair magnet population tends to do a lot of SAT preparation over a number of years.
Good SAT performance has very little to do with what is being taught in school. Particularly in the verbal section but even in the math.
Anonymous wrote:The participants from Whitman are significantly less than other schools. More than PHS. But PHS is a much smaller school. Why?
Congrats to the homogenous try-hards of the county!!!Anonymous wrote:Kudos to the Whitman Principal, Teachers and Staff for having the highest SAT score average within MCPS! Same goes to Churchill, Poolesville and Wootton who all averaged over 1200! The next highest HS average wasn't even close - 100 points lower on average.
# R M T
1 Walt Whitman HS 344 652 648 1301
2 Winston Churchill HS 426 645 647 1292
3 Poolesville HS 303 649 642 1291
4 Thomas S. Wootton HS 405 637 647 1284
College Readiness Data (ZIP 31KB)
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/DataDownloads/FileDownload/520
Great job!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kudos to the Whitman Principal, Teachers and Staff for having the highest SAT score average within MCPS! Same goes to Churchill, Poolesville and Wootton who all averaged over 1200! The next highest HS average wasn't even close - 100 points lower on average.
# R M T
1 Walt Whitman HS 344 652 648 1301
2 Winston Churchill HS 426 645 647 1292
3 Poolesville HS 303 649 642 1291
4 Thomas S. Wootton HS 405 637 647 1284
College Readiness Data (ZIP 31KB)
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/DataDownloads/FileDownload/520
Great job!
I challenge you to match farms rate and test score. In MCPS low farms = high test score in comparison to higher farms schools. I would be much more impressed with a high farms school getting a high test score.
Anonymous wrote:That's quite good given the brain drain to the magnets. Look at the list of US Presidential Scholarship candidates and NMFs. Heavily concentrated at the magnets.
Anonymous wrote:They’re the whitest schools. What are you congratulating?