Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:TJ Class of 2016 has students going to Harvard (6), MIT (13), Williams (1), Caltech (3), Harvey Mudd (1), Stanford (7), Berkeley (12), Chicago (13), Michigan (11), Brown (3), USAF (1), USCG (1), Carnegie Mellon (23), Penn (7), Yale (7), Dartmouth (4), Georgia Tech (6), Duke (8), Columbia (9), Cornell (8), Princeton (6), Olin (2), Wellesley (1), Swarthmore (3), Georgetown (5), Vanderbilt (3), Washington U. (2), Purdue (8), Rose-Hulman (2), Rennslauer (6), Rochester Tech (4). That is about 40% of the class of something like 457.
Another 1/3 go to UVA (81), W&M (32), or VA Tech (35).
Others go to places like NYU, UCLA, IU, Notre Dame, Colby, Bowdoin, VCU (6), JMU (3), George Mason (11), U of Colorado, Reed, Oregon State, Miami, USC, schools abroad, Richmond, Case Western, Penn State, GW, Syracuse, Rutgers.
A sizable number of TJ students end up at VA state universities. My kid can accomplish this from a regular/good/run-of-the-mill VA public high school. What's all the fuss?
Maybe that one HS sent 6 kids to Harvard, 13 (!!) to MIT, 3 to Cal Tech, 7 to Stanford, 7 to Yale, 23 to Carnagie Melon, etc. Can you any other HS that does that? The bottom 1/2 of TJ goes to UVA & W&M. Is that really true at a "run of the mill" FCPS HS?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:TJ Class of 2016 has students going to Harvard (6), MIT (13), Williams (1), Caltech (3), Harvey Mudd (1), Stanford (7), Berkeley (12), Chicago (13), Michigan (11), Brown (3), USAF (1), USCG (1), Carnegie Mellon (23), Penn (7), Yale (7), Dartmouth (4), Georgia Tech (6), Duke (8), Columbia (9), Cornell (8), Princeton (6), Olin (2), Wellesley (1), Swarthmore (3), Georgetown (5), Vanderbilt (3), Washington U. (2), Purdue (8), Rose-Hulman (2), Rennslauer (6), Rochester Tech (4). That is about 40% of the class of something like 457.
Another 1/3 go to UVA (81), W&M (32), or VA Tech (35).
Others go to places like NYU, UCLA, IU, Notre Dame, Colby, Bowdoin, VCU (6), JMU (3), George Mason (11), U of Colorado, Reed, Oregon State, Miami, USC, schools abroad, Richmond, Case Western, Penn State, GW, Syracuse, Rutgers.
A sizable number of TJ students end up at VA state universities. My kid can accomplish this from a regular/good/run-of-the-mill VA public high school. What's all the fuss?
Maybe that one HS sent 6 kids to Harvard, 13 (!!) to MIT, 3 to Cal Tech, 7 to Stanford, 7 to Yale, 23 to Carnagie Melon, etc. Can you any other HS that does that? The bottom 1/2 of TJ goes to UVA & W&M. Is that really true at a "run of the mill" FCPS HS?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:TJ Class of 2016 has students going to Harvard (6), MIT (13), Williams (1), Caltech (3), Harvey Mudd (1), Stanford (7), Berkeley (12), Chicago (13), Michigan (11), Brown (3), USAF (1), USCG (1), Carnegie Mellon (23), Penn (7), Yale (7), Dartmouth (4), Georgia Tech (6), Duke (8), Columbia (9), Cornell (8), Princeton (6), Olin (2), Wellesley (1), Swarthmore (3), Georgetown (5), Vanderbilt (3), Washington U. (2), Purdue (8), Rose-Hulman (2), Rennslauer (6), Rochester Tech (4). That is about 40% of the class of something like 457.
Another 1/3 go to UVA (81), W&M (32), or VA Tech (35).
Others go to places like NYU, UCLA, IU, Notre Dame, Colby, Bowdoin, VCU (6), JMU (3), George Mason (11), U of Colorado, Reed, Oregon State, Miami, USC, schools abroad, Richmond, Case Western, Penn State, GW, Syracuse, Rutgers.
A sizable number of TJ students end up at VA state universities. My kid can accomplish this from a regular/good/run-of-the-mill VA public high school. What's all the fuss?
Maybe that one HS sent 6 kids to Harvard, 13 (!!) to MIT, 3 to Cal Tech, 7 to Stanford, 7 to Yale, 23 to Carnagie Melon, etc. Can you any other HS that does that? The bottom 1/2 of TJ goes to UVA & W&M. Is that really true at a "run of the mill" FCPS HS?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:TJ Class of 2016 has students going to Harvard (6), MIT (13), Williams (1), Caltech (3), Harvey Mudd (1), Stanford (7), Berkeley (12), Chicago (13), Michigan (11), Brown (3), USAF (1), USCG (1), Carnegie Mellon (23), Penn (7), Yale (7), Dartmouth (4), Georgia Tech (6), Duke (8), Columbia (9), Cornell (8), Princeton (6), Olin (2), Wellesley (1), Swarthmore (3), Georgetown (5), Vanderbilt (3), Washington U. (2), Purdue (8), Rose-Hulman (2), Rennslauer (6), Rochester Tech (4). That is about 40% of the class of something like 457.
Another 1/3 go to UVA (81), W&M (32), or VA Tech (35).
Others go to places like NYU, UCLA, IU, Notre Dame, Colby, Bowdoin, VCU (6), JMU (3), George Mason (11), U of Colorado, Reed, Oregon State, Miami, USC, schools abroad, Richmond, Case Western, Penn State, GW, Syracuse, Rutgers.
A sizable number of TJ students end up at VA state universities. My kid can accomplish this from a regular/good/run-of-the-mill VA public high school. What's all the fuss?
Anonymous wrote:TJ Class of 2016 has students going to Harvard (6), MIT (13), Williams (1), Caltech (3), Harvey Mudd (1), Stanford (7), Berkeley (12), Chicago (13), Michigan (11), Brown (3), USAF (1), USCG (1), Carnegie Mellon (23), Penn (7), Yale (7), Dartmouth (4), Georgia Tech (6), Duke (8), Columbia (9), Cornell (8), Princeton (6), Olin (2), Wellesley (1), Swarthmore (3), Georgetown (5), Vanderbilt (3), Washington U. (2), Purdue (8), Rose-Hulman (2), Rennslauer (6), Rochester Tech (4). That is about 40% of the class of something like 457.
Another 1/3 go to UVA (81), W&M (32), or VA Tech (35).
Others go to places like NYU, UCLA, IU, Notre Dame, Colby, Bowdoin, VCU (6), JMU (3), George Mason (11), U of Colorado, Reed, Oregon State, Miami, USC, schools abroad, Richmond, Case Western, Penn State, GW, Syracuse, Rutgers.
Anonymous wrote:Look. You are pretty clearly aiming for a certain type of answer by posting in P & I schools. You want posters who think private school is worth any cost. If you post in VA public schools or General Education or AAP, you will get a much different sampling of answers (like why would I not send my STEM kid to the best STEM school in the nation for free, and I do not want to let my high school freshman leave home).
TJ and top BSs get very different applicants with different priorities, and comparing them to find the "best" is apples and oranges. If you have a kid at a TJ and/or top BS level, then you go with their needs and the needs of your family. They are looking for different things in their applicant, and I doubt many TJ kids are well rounded enough for a top BS, or the top BS kids have the STEM chops to be admitted to TJ. Sure there are exception. But they are exceptions.
But at least own the fact that by posting in this forum, you are not getting a true sample. Just like posting in VA PS or AAP would give you a sample strongly skewed toward TJ being better.
Anonymous wrote:Entitled slackers bitching about "strivers" and "try hards," with a dollop of racism and Masters of the Universe pretensions on the side. Charming!
Anonymous wrote:
So, how many Sarah Kims are in here?
http://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/476545.page
Remember the call from Zuckerberg? Except he didn't call?? She got into both Harvard and Stanford... Except she didn't... Sad story, really.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband went to harvard, and his classmates that went to Exeter or Andover or Saint Paul's claim their high school classmates were smarter on the whole than their college classmates. They remain the only true ivy feeders. And with huge endowments, they can give generous financial aid.
This. I worked harder and was surrounded by smarter and more talented people, overall, at one of the three schools mentioned above than I was at HYPS for UG/Law. I had never heard of TJ before moving to this area. I'm sure it's a fine school, but clearly it does not have the same global alumni network or social/cultural currency that Exeter or Andover has. Honestly the only people I've heard talk about TJ sound very "striverish" (for lack of a better word).
b/c of family connections. most of (if not all) tj families are middle working class with no meaningful connections.
Ummm tj parent here and I would not call them middle working class. Ok no trumps or johnsons, but pretty wealthy for the most part.
Agree. Most TJ parents tend to be professionals: physicians, lawyers, engineers, researchers, accountants, PhDs at IMF/World Bank, some diplomats etc.
Anonymous wrote:TJ Class of 2016 has students going to Harvard (6), MIT (13), Williams (1), Caltech (3), Harvey Mudd (1), Stanford (7), Berkeley (12), Chicago (13), Michigan (11), Brown (3), USAF (1), USCG (1), Carnegie Mellon (23), Penn (7), Yale (7), Dartmouth (4), Georgia Tech (6), Duke (8), Columbia (9), Cornell (8), Princeton (6), Olin (2), Wellesley (1), Swarthmore (3), Georgetown (5), Vanderbilt (3), Washington U. (2), Purdue (8), Rose-Hulman (2), Rennslauer (6), Rochester Tech (4). That is about 40% of the class of something like 457.
Another 1/3 go to UVA (81), W&M (32), or VA Tech (35).
Others go to places like NYU, UCLA, IU, Notre Dame, Colby, Bowdoin, VCU (6), JMU (3), George Mason (11), U of Colorado, Reed, Oregon State, Miami, USC, schools abroad, Richmond, Case Western, Penn State, GW, Syracuse, Rutgers.