Anonymous wrote:In ten years, percentage of Asians admitted went from 38% to 75%
http://www.fcag.org/tjadmits2007.html
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop feeding the troll. It leads the discussion to nowhere.
If you have a kid at TJ, you know this is killing the school. Pressure, stress, an impossibly heavy workload because PARENTS demand it (if the kid isn't working 24/7, it's not hard enough) and rampant cheating with zero consequences. It isn't good for the students or the school.
Look at the TJ student survey. The percentage of kids reporting parental physical and emotional abuse and a number of other stress and MH related problems is significantly higher at TJ than FCPS as a whole.
Anonymous wrote:Stop feeding the troll. It leads the discussion to nowhere.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Why so few from Longfellow? It is a power AAP center like Carson. Lots of semi finalists but only a third make the final cut...
It kind of depends on what you mean by "power AAP center." Longfellow is one of the main feeders to TJ after Carson, but it doesn't have students from as many ES AAP programs feeding into it as Carson, much less Rocky Run. The AAP program there basically consists of students from the McLean HS pyramid, plus some of the AAP students from the Langley pyramid who aren't at Kilmer or Cooper.
When you look where students at TJ live in terms of the various HS pyramids, rather than in terms of the MS AAP programs, which differ in size, the top five HS pyramids and their associated AAP MSs are:
1. Oakton (Carson/Jackson) (156)
2. McLean (Longfellow) (150)
3. Chantilly (Carson/Rocky Run) (147)
4. Langley (Cooper/Kilmer/Longfellow) (147)
5. Westfield (Carson/Rocky Run) (105)
This statistic is misleading, because Jackson is also the AAP center for Madison HS.
Anonymous wrote:I think TJ has reached the tipping point where white, hispanic and AA applicants have less interest in even applying or going to TJ. I know I feel that way -- the cheating, the pressure -- who wants it? Granted, I don't have a kid there, but it just seems like a giant freak show that has a good chance of causing my kid anxiety and the need for therapy.
The tipping point happened a couple of years ago. Can you really blame people when the numbers of some groups are extremely low or getting quite low? You can't help but think "my kid won't fit in here" or "my kid doesn't know the cultural 'rules' that will dominate this school."
I don't think it is entirely correct to just compare admitted numbers to applicant numbers b/c there is a chilling effect on who even applies. I think the AAP stats probably are a better representation -- but even those have problems. Shouldn't the AAP demographics mirror the county as a whole? (I know they don't -- but they should.)
Anonymous wrote:Are people really defending these numbers? Much can be argued about the merits of individual students and how the process works, but these numbers, this outcome, is appalling
Anonymous wrote:
Why so few from Longfellow? It is a power AAP center like Carson. Lots of semi finalists but only a third make the final cut...
It kind of depends on what you mean by "power AAP center." Longfellow is one of the main feeders to TJ after Carson, but it doesn't have students from as many ES AAP programs feeding into it as Carson, much less Rocky Run. The AAP program there basically consists of students from the McLean HS pyramid, plus some of the AAP students from the Langley pyramid who aren't at Kilmer or Cooper.
When you look where students at TJ live in terms of the various HS pyramids, rather than in terms of the MS AAP programs, which differ in size, the top five HS pyramids and their associated AAP MSs are:
1. Oakton (Carson/Jackson) (156)
2. McLean (Longfellow) (150)
3. Chantilly (Carson/Rocky Run) (147)
4. Langley (Cooper/Kilmer/Longfellow) (147)
5. Westfield (Carson/Rocky Run) (105)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's inevitable that FCPS will pull the plug on TJ within the next 5-6 years. County residents will not continue to support a magnet that opens its doors to only a handful of non-Asians. This is the final nail in the coffin.
How many Asians are in NBA, or any team / school sports at HS level that can result in scholarships / admissions to top colleges? OMG, this is totally unacceptable and unrepresentative!!! non-asians cheat by prepping in sports and get better. This has to stop.
That is how the argument goes on against the one thing that Asian kids try to focus on, academic, so let's stop it and dumb it down.
Except high SES white kids are every bit as prepared to succeed at TJ. Asian kids do not have some superior intellect. A kid who is super prepped for one specific test is not necessarily prepared for all of the TJ classes. And there are plenty of non-Asian kids who applied and were not accepted. Asian kids measure success by one high test score. But there is more to success at TJ than being able to get one high test score. -- TJ parent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's inevitable that FCPS will pull the plug on TJ within the next 5-6 years. County residents will not continue to support a magnet that opens its doors to only a handful of non-Asians. This is the final nail in the coffin.
How many Asians are in NBA, or any team / school sports at HS level that can result in scholarships / admissions to top colleges? OMG, this is totally unacceptable and unrepresentative!!! non-asians cheat by prepping in sports and get better. This has to stop.
That is how the argument goes on against the one thing that Asian kids try to focus on, academic, so let's stop it and dumb it down.