Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For the last time. There is no advantage of going to TJ for college admissions. Let me break it down
You stay at base school you are in the top 10% = UVA and crapshoot for Ivies/elite schools
You go to TJ now you are not a big fish in a small pond anymore. what happens how "good" is your child really..... And even if you make top 10% TJ Ivies are still a crapshoot
Bottom Line go to TJ if you actually care about STEM and you are willing to have 4+ hours of hw a night and many times much more
Agreed. In fact, TJ students not in the top 20% are probably at a disadvantage wrt elite schools. As mentioned on Stanford's admissions page, "We expect that these students have taken high school course loads of reasonable and appropriate challenge in the context of their schools." Since TJ kids have more opportunities in terms of labs, a strong academic culture, internships, etc, they are held to a higher standard than most applicants. Can most TJ students say that they took full advantage of the STEM courses and opportunities made available to them?
Many TJ students attend TJ for the experience and to learn not to try to get into certain college. Most TJ students end up at very good colleges.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For the last time. There is no advantage of going to TJ for college admissions. Let me break it down
You stay at base school you are in the top 10% = UVA and crapshoot for Ivies/elite schools
You go to TJ now you are not a big fish in a small pond anymore. what happens how "good" is your child really..... And even if you make top 10% TJ Ivies are still a crapshoot
Bottom Line go to TJ if you actually care about STEM and you are willing to have 4+ hours of hw a night and many times much more
Yes, there is an advantage. Certain schools pay no attention to you, even if you have straight A's and 2400 SAT, at some base schools.
For example, at our base school, one of the top HS in the state, one kid, just one, has been admitted to MIT over the last 6 years. At TJ, almost 100 kids have been admitted in that time.
Over the last 2 years at our base school, among Harvard, Yale and Princeton, there's just been one admission. One person's been admitted to Columbia in the last 6 years. Three have gotten into Stanford in that time. Two into Caltach. etc, etc.
And to the other PP, no, 30 kids from TJ didn't go to Cornell last year or any year. 23 was the most, in the 2014.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For the last time. There is no advantage of going to TJ for college admissions. Let me break it down
You stay at base school you are in the top 10% = UVA and crapshoot for Ivies/elite schools
You go to TJ now you are not a big fish in a small pond anymore. what happens how "good" is your child really..... And even if you make top 10% TJ Ivies are still a crapshoot
Bottom Line go to TJ if you actually care about STEM and you are willing to have 4+ hours of hw a night and many times much more
Agreed. In fact, TJ students not in the top 20% are probably at a disadvantage wrt elite schools. As mentioned on Stanford's admissions page, "We expect that these students have taken high school course loads of reasonable and appropriate challenge in the context of their schools." Since TJ kids have more opportunities in terms of labs, a strong academic culture, internships, etc, they are held to a higher standard than most applicants. Can most TJ students say that they took full advantage of the STEM courses and opportunities made available to them?
Anonymous wrote:For the last time. There is no advantage of going to TJ for college admissions. Let me break it down
You stay at base school you are in the top 10% = UVA and crapshoot for Ivies/elite schools
You go to TJ now you are not a big fish in a small pond anymore. what happens how "good" is your child really..... And even if you make top 10% TJ Ivies are still a crapshoot
Bottom Line go to TJ if you actually care about STEM and you are willing to have 4+ hours of hw a night and many times much more
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder if the all-consuming nature of TJ is any different from the base schools? I remember being very busy with homework and activities in HS. Family was definitely on the periphery.
Our non-TJ kid (at another phenomenal school) has a much better balance of school, work, and activities. I had a senior TJ mom warn me about the workload/stressful climate when my son got in and to be honest, I thought she was exaggerating. She was not and I wish I had listened to her. In the end, you have to do what is best for your child and your family.
I have one at TJ and one at top FCPS. There is no comparison between the two academically -- TJ is MUCH more work, more in depth, many more hours of studying. If your HS student does certain sports they will be "busy" but the academic level at TJ is far different than any FCPS. There is a list of top public schools in the US on another thread -- FCPS do not even make the list, and TJ is #1.
My DS at TJ stats: Never made a B in anything before TJ, AAP, IQ 135, SAT 2275 (old) National Merit scholar, attending MIT in the fall -- just an ordinary student at TJ. MANY hours of homework.
Congrats new TJ acceptances! just know its a ton of work!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From TJ Naviance - 29 admits to Cornell in 2015, 14 enrolled.
Cornell's one of the easier Ivy's to get into and more people tend to be unhappy there than at other Ivies. I don't know if it's where it's located, or the general culture, but that's been the experience of 3 young people I know.
Yes, every FCPS school has 29 kids admitted to Cornell; it is quite the common event. Yawn. No big deal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From TJ Naviance - 29 admits to Cornell in 2015, 14 enrolled.
Cornell's one of the easier Ivy's to get into and more people tend to be unhappy there than at other Ivies. I don't know if it's where it's located, or the general culture, but that's been the experience of 3 young people I know.
Anonymous wrote:From TJ Naviance - 29 admits to Cornell in 2015, 14 enrolled.
Anonymous wrote:For the last time. There is no advantage of going to TJ for college admissions. Let me break it down
You stay at base school you are in the top 10% = UVA and crapshoot for Ivies/elite schools
You go to TJ now you are not a big fish in a small pond anymore. what happens how "good" is your child really..... And even if you make top 10% TJ Ivies are still a crapshoot
Bottom Line go to TJ if you actually care about STEM and you are willing to have 4+ hours of hw a night and many times much more
Anonymous wrote:For the last time. There is no advantage of going to TJ for college admissions. Let me break it down
You stay at base school you are in the top 10% = UVA and crapshoot for Ivies/elite schools
You go to TJ now you are not a big fish in a small pond anymore. what happens how "good" is your child really..... And even if you make top 10% TJ Ivies are still a crapshoot
Bottom Line go to TJ if you actually care about STEM and you are willing to have 4+ hours of hw a night and many times much more
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I looked at last year's data. 1/3 of TJ goes to ivy leagues. Rest of them split between good private schools, UVA and other state schools. Lot of kids who go to UVA also get scholarships or atleast 1/3 tuition scholarship etc.
Wrong. Not even close. But a TJ kid with a weighted 4.4 GPA has a much better chance of getting into an Ivy than a kid from our base school with the same GPA. Colleges recognize that TJ is more challenging and give applicants credit for that.
About 1/3 goes to Ivy and Ivy caliber schools such as Chicago, Duke, Berkeley, Northwestern, MIT, Michigan, Stanford etc.