Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Queue up the whiners, complainers, rationalizers, and haters.
This I know - TJ will open next year an excited cohort of first year students notwithstanding all your lawsuits and handwringing
This I know - The Class of 2025 will have historically low SAT scores, MIT admissions, Ivy Admissions, NMSF, etc.
Nah. TJ does poorly enough on Ivy/MIT as it is relative to what they should do.
SATs and NMSF, sure, but exam scores are rapidly becoming a relic of the past in terms of stuff anyone cares about.
Are you kidding? They have huge number of elite admissions— can’t compete with the white privilege boarding schools, buy other than that, huge numbers!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Queue up the whiners, complainers, rationalizers, and haters.
This I know - TJ will open next year an excited cohort of first year students notwithstanding all your lawsuits and handwringing
This I know - The Class of 2025 will have historically low SAT scores, MIT admissions, Ivy Admissions, NMSF, etc.
Nah. TJ does poorly enough on Ivy/MIT as it is relative to what they should do.
SATs and NMSF, sure, but exam scores are rapidly becoming a relic of the past in terms of stuff anyone cares about.
Anonymous wrote:Queue up the whiners, complainers, rationalizers, and haters.
This I know - TJ will open next year an excited cohort of first year students notwithstanding all your lawsuits and handwringing
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Queue up the whiners, complainers, rationalizers, and haters.
This I know - TJ will open next year an excited cohort of first year students notwithstanding all your lawsuits and handwringing
This I know - The Class of 2025 will have historically low SAT scores, MIT admissions, Ivy Admissions, NMSF, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Queue up the whiners, complainers, rationalizers, and haters.
This I know - TJ will open next year an excited cohort of first year students notwithstanding all your lawsuits and handwringing
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Thank you!! Super helpful. Have these questions appeared on paper in prior budget discussions? Surprised this isn't more widely reported - but then, the fervor for TJ doesn't exist in Arlington to quite the same extent as it does in other local communities."
There has been some discussion on AEM and other Facebook groups. At least one Board member (RG) responded when asked about this: "What should we cut instead?" The obvious and snarky response, of course, was "Board member salaries," but I don't think anyone actually said that. Don't know whether the money which might flow from the recently passed COVID-relief bill might "save" some of these Tier 1 cuts, which also included things like Middle School sports and extra-curricular clubs like Math Counts and Science Olympiad.
Amusingly, if you cut TJ, you'd probably eliminate a lot of the demand for Math Counts and Science Olympiad. Not all of it, to be sure, but a fair amount. I wonder how many APS students eschew middle school sports in favor of stuff that "will help them get into TJ". I will tell you it happens a TON in Fairfax and Loudoun, even though sports out there are club-based.
Anonymous wrote:Queue up the whiners, complainers, rationalizers, and haters.
This I know - TJ will open next year an excited cohort of first year students notwithstanding all your lawsuits and handwringing
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Thank you!! Super helpful. Have these questions appeared on paper in prior budget discussions? Surprised this isn't more widely reported - but then, the fervor for TJ doesn't exist in Arlington to quite the same extent as it does in other local communities."
There has been some discussion on AEM and other Facebook groups. At least one Board member (RG) responded when asked about this: "What should we cut instead?" The obvious and snarky response, of course, was "Board member salaries," but I don't think anyone actually said that. Don't know whether the money which might flow from the recently passed COVID-relief bill might "save" some of these Tier 1 cuts, which also included things like Middle School sports and extra-curricular clubs like Math Counts and Science Olympiad.
Amusingly, if you cut TJ, you'd probably eliminate a lot of the demand for Math Counts and Science Olympiad. Not all of it, to be sure, but a fair amount. I wonder how many APS students eschew middle school sports in favor of stuff that "will help them get into TJ". I will tell you it happens a TON in Fairfax and Loudoun, even though sports out there are club-based.
Arlington would only send 12-15 kids every admissions cycle. That is out of 7 middle schools so you are talking one or two kids per school getting in to start with. Most kids don't waste their time even thinking about TJ in Arlington since the county has great high schools. Arlington has been talking about dropping out of TJ for years. I assume it will happen in the next year or two.
This is a fair point, but substantially all of the APS TJ cohort comes from Williamsburg (mostly) and Swanson (a few) with an odd exception here or there from Jefferson or maybe Kenmore.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Thank you!! Super helpful. Have these questions appeared on paper in prior budget discussions? Surprised this isn't more widely reported - but then, the fervor for TJ doesn't exist in Arlington to quite the same extent as it does in other local communities."
There has been some discussion on AEM and other Facebook groups. At least one Board member (RG) responded when asked about this: "What should we cut instead?" The obvious and snarky response, of course, was "Board member salaries," but I don't think anyone actually said that. Don't know whether the money which might flow from the recently passed COVID-relief bill might "save" some of these Tier 1 cuts, which also included things like Middle School sports and extra-curricular clubs like Math Counts and Science Olympiad.
Amusingly, if you cut TJ, you'd probably eliminate a lot of the demand for Math Counts and Science Olympiad. Not all of it, to be sure, but a fair amount. I wonder how many APS students eschew middle school sports in favor of stuff that "will help them get into TJ". I will tell you it happens a TON in Fairfax and Loudoun, even though sports out there are club-based.
Arlington would only send 12-15 kids every admissions cycle. That is out of 7 middle schools so you are talking one or two kids per school getting in to start with. Most kids don't waste their time even thinking about TJ in Arlington since the county has great high schools. Arlington has been talking about dropping out of TJ for years. I assume it will happen in the next year or two.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is pretty good chance that Arlington will be ending its participation at TJ starting with this year's 8th graders. This willl remove a number of people from the potential pool of applicants or, at the very least, dampen the number of Arlington applicants who might say: "Why bother applying if they won't let me attend even if I get in." I think this is a terrible decision on the part of APS.
Loudoun has been talking about doing this forever, but this is the first I've heard of Arlington exploring it. What's a source on this?
Its the most likely group of budget cuts (Tier 1). Here is a link to questions that have been posed about. https://www.apsva.us/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/FY-2022-Budget-Questions-and-Responses_Distributed-March-8-2021.pdf. Note that I believe that prior court cases would prohibit Arlington from allowing kids to go but requiring them to pay tuition.
Thank you!! Super helpful. Have these questions appeared on paper in prior budget discussions? Surprised this isn't more widely reported - but then, the fervor for TJ doesn't exist in Arlington to quite the same extent as it does in other local communities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Thank you!! Super helpful. Have these questions appeared on paper in prior budget discussions? Surprised this isn't more widely reported - but then, the fervor for TJ doesn't exist in Arlington to quite the same extent as it does in other local communities."
There has been some discussion on AEM and other Facebook groups. At least one Board member (RG) responded when asked about this: "What should we cut instead?" The obvious and snarky response, of course, was "Board member salaries," but I don't think anyone actually said that. Don't know whether the money which might flow from the recently passed COVID-relief bill might "save" some of these Tier 1 cuts, which also included things like Middle School sports and extra-curricular clubs like Math Counts and Science Olympiad.
Amusingly, if you cut TJ, you'd probably eliminate a lot of the demand for Math Counts and Science Olympiad. Not all of it, to be sure, but a fair amount. I wonder how many APS students eschew middle school sports in favor of stuff that "will help them get into TJ". I will tell you it happens a TON in Fairfax and Loudoun, even though sports out there are club-based.