Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How difficult is to get into Swim,Tennis, Basketball,Crew teams?
Usually getting into sports team in base high school is tough
I think most teams can be accessed. Basketball may be a little more difficult because of the small roster. I think the swim teams are quite good, but because of the nature of the sport most kids can be on the team. The Football team is always looking for players. If you want to play, you're in!
Cross country and track usually have space for anyone who is willing to put in the time and effort and work hard. A plus of going out for a fall sport is that new students can meet a lot of other kids while practicing in August. It’s really nice when they already know a group of kids in the first day, especially if they’re coming from one of the smaller middle schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can kids who have completed Spanish 1 and 2 in middle school take online summer Spanish 3 as a rising 9th grader?
Can TJHSST students complete foreign language requirement to graduate before entering TJ?
I have this question too.
You could finish Spanish 3 over the summer and take a whole new language at TJ - like German Japanese or French and then continue with that language for a few years - that will look good to colleges and satisfy TJ that you are taking a language at TJ.
And if you take German x 4 years or till AP you can attend German Austrian or Swiss university and German and Austrian tuition is virtually free by US standards.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:New pp here. Thank you for all your input here and our first DC got in.
Can first PP or others expand on this : "They will take AP level classes, like CS and World History, and not get AP credit. Make peace with that now. " '
Does that mean, they don't get AP Credit at all for many classes?
Please keep your views coming and your opinions are extremely helpful for parents like me and OP.
It means there are several classes at TJ that are taught at an AP level with AP text books but they aren't called AP classes so you don't get the GPA boost. It sucks.
Even freshman bio is taught from the AP textbook so it's basically an AP-level course just with a couple of topics short of tge full curriculum (which one could independently review to write the AP exam if there isnt room later in the students course plan to take the "real" AP bio course. Ditto for CS foundations which covers java during the year - you could with a bit of extra studying write the CS A AP exam. The first-level courses at TJ are taught at the senior-level depth of "normal" high schools. The kids at TJ are all pretty sharp and can handle a robust curriculum and pace of learning. (I'm sure the top kids at other FCPS high schools could learn at this pace as well if they loaded up on AP level courses earlier in their high school careers.)
Ok, sure.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:New pp here. Thank you for all your input here and our first DC got in.
Can first PP or others expand on this : "They will take AP level classes, like CS and World History, and not get AP credit. Make peace with that now. " '
Does that mean, they don't get AP Credit at all for many classes?
Please keep your views coming and your opinions are extremely helpful for parents like me and OP.
It means there are several classes at TJ that are taught at an AP level with AP text books but they aren't called AP classes so you don't get the GPA boost. It sucks.
Even freshman bio is taught from the AP textbook so it's basically an AP-level course just with a couple of topics short of tge full curriculum (which one could independently review to write the AP exam if there isnt room later in the students course plan to take the "real" AP bio course. Ditto for CS foundations which covers java during the year - you could with a bit of extra studying write the CS A AP exam. The first-level courses at TJ are taught at the senior-level depth of "normal" high schools. The kids at TJ are all pretty sharp and can handle a robust curriculum and pace of learning. (I'm sure the top kids at other FCPS high schools could learn at this pace as well if they loaded up on AP level courses earlier in their high school careers.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can kids who have completed Spanish 1 and 2 in middle school take online summer Spanish 3 as a rising 9th grader?
Can TJHSST students complete foreign language requirement to graduate before entering TJ?
I have this question too.
You could finish Spanish 3 over the summer and take a whole new language at TJ - like German Japanese or French and then continue with that language for a few years - that will look good to colleges and satisfy TJ that you are taking a language at TJ.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can kids who have completed Spanish 1 and 2 in middle school take online summer Spanish 3 as a rising 9th grader?
Can TJHSST students complete foreign language requirement to graduate before entering TJ?
I have this question too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can kids who have completed Spanish 1 and 2 in middle school take online summer Spanish 3 as a rising 9th grader?
Can TJHSST students complete foreign language requirement to graduate before entering TJ?
I have this question too.
Anonymous wrote:Can kids who have completed Spanish 1 and 2 in middle school take online summer Spanish 3 as a rising 9th grader?
Can TJHSST students complete foreign language requirement to graduate before entering TJ?
Anonymous wrote:TJ classes are on a college level. Not the hardest college but still college level. Health class for my DS was like first year nursing course. AP physics IS a bear.