Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A goodly number of Arlington high schools are in privates and they take up some of the "Arlington" Ivy slots. The top schools don't want too many kids from any one place and if Harvard has a kid from Arlington from St Albans and one from Potomac and one from Sidwell, that's three already. They might only take one more from APS.
Harvard isn't taking 75% of its freshmen class from private schools. You should be looking at TJ and other public schools in NoVa and MoCo as well.
I guarantee that the lions share of ivy admissions FROM THIS AREA, are coming from private schools.
I went to an Ivy in the early 80s and the "lion's share" of students from this area were from NoVa and MoCo. And that was before TJHSST even had graduating classes.
^ from NoVo and MoCo publics.
You're trying to compare college admissions 35 years ago to college admissions today? What rock do you live under?
The one that knows, as an Ivy alum, that the percentage of students coming from private schools has only decreased in recent decades.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A goodly number of Arlington high schools are in privates and they take up some of the "Arlington" Ivy slots. The top schools don't want too many kids from any one place and if Harvard has a kid from Arlington from St Albans and one from Potomac and one from Sidwell, that's three already. They might only take one more from APS.
Harvard isn't taking 75% of its freshmen class from private schools. You should be looking at TJ and other public schools in NoVa and MoCo as well.
I guarantee that the lions share of ivy admissions FROM THIS AREA, are coming from private schools.
I went to an Ivy in the early 80s and the "lion's share" of students from this area were from NoVa and MoCo. And that was before TJHSST even had graduating classes.
^ from NoVo and MoCo publics.
You're trying to compare college admissions 35 years ago to college admissions today? What rock do you live under?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A goodly number of Arlington high schools are in privates and they take up some of the "Arlington" Ivy slots. The top schools don't want too many kids from any one place and if Harvard has a kid from Arlington from St Albans and one from Potomac and one from Sidwell, that's three already. They might only take one more from APS.
Harvard isn't taking 75% of its freshmen class from private schools. You should be looking at TJ and other public schools in NoVa and MoCo as well.
I guarantee that the lions share of ivy admissions FROM THIS AREA, are coming from private schools.
I went to an Ivy in the early 80s and the "lion's share" of students from this area were from NoVa and MoCo. And that was before TJHSST even had graduating classes.
^ from NoVo and MoCo publics.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A goodly number of Arlington high schools are in privates and they take up some of the "Arlington" Ivy slots. The top schools don't want too many kids from any one place and if Harvard has a kid from Arlington from St Albans and one from Potomac and one from Sidwell, that's three already. They might only take one more from APS.
Harvard isn't taking 75% of its freshmen class from private schools. You should be looking at TJ and other public schools in NoVa and MoCo as well.
I guarantee that the lions share of ivy admissions FROM THIS AREA, are coming from private schools.
I went to an Ivy in the early 80s and the "lion's share" of students from this area were from NoVa and MoCo. And that was before TJHSST even had graduating classes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A goodly number of Arlington high schools are in privates and they take up some of the "Arlington" Ivy slots. The top schools don't want too many kids from any one place and if Harvard has a kid from Arlington from St Albans and one from Potomac and one from Sidwell, that's three already. They might only take one more from APS.
Harvard isn't taking 75% of its freshmen class from private schools. You should be looking at TJ and other public schools in NoVa and MoCo as well.
I guarantee that the lions share of ivy admissions FROM THIS AREA, are coming from private schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A goodly number of Arlington high schools are in privates and they take up some of the "Arlington" Ivy slots. The top schools don't want too many kids from any one place and if Harvard has a kid from Arlington from St Albans and one from Potomac and one from Sidwell, that's three already. They might only take one more from APS.
Harvard isn't taking 75% of its freshmen class from private schools. You should be looking at TJ and other public schools in NoVa and MoCo as well.
Anonymous wrote:A goodly number of Arlington high schools are in privates and they take up some of the "Arlington" Ivy slots. The top schools don't want too many kids from any one place and if Harvard has a kid from Arlington from St Albans and one from Potomac and one from Sidwell, that's three already. They might only take one more from APS.
Anonymous wrote:A goodly number of Arlington high schools are in privates and they take up some of the "Arlington" Ivy slots. The top schools don't want too many kids from any one place and if Harvard has a kid from Arlington from St Albans and one from Potomac and one from Sidwell, that's three already. They might only take one more from APS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went or an ivy league from a rural school district. I couldn't give a fig about if a school helps me get into these competitive colkeges -- does it prepare me for success there?
My time at college was much kind of awful and traumatic b/c I was so underprepated compared to my classmates.
That is the question we should be asking.
Good point. A couple of years back, USNWR provided a "College Readiness" index on a scale of 0-100 and rated essentially every high school in the country. To its credit, TJSST rated a 100.0, one of only 2-3 high schools in the country to get that rating. Montgomery Blair (a magnet) was also high 90s. Most FCPS and APS high schools rated between 65.0 and 75.0.
Anonymous wrote:I went or an ivy league from a rural school district. I couldn't give a fig about if a school helps me get into these competitive colkeges -- does it prepare me for success there?
My time at college was much kind of awful and traumatic b/c I was so underprepated compared to my classmates.
That is the question we should be asking.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:http://www.arlingtonmagazine.com/where-arlington-grads-applied-and-were-accepted-to-college/
The Arlington Magazine stats actually make the situation look BETTER than it really is. The reason is that they report acceptances and not matriculations. This means that, for a given school, the reported acceptances from Dartmouth, Duke, Denison and Davidson could all be attributed to the same student.
I think we're all aware of this. It doesn't answer the original question, though, of how APS compares to other public school systems. If this is simply the pattern for a solid public school system and not a sign that APS is failing compared to comparable school systems, then this data doesn't concern me. If APS is lagging behind peer systems, though, that's cause for concern and we need to identify why.
For at least the last 10 years, HB Woodlawn, Washington-Lee and Yorktown all lag behind McLean HS and Langley and well behind Walt Whitman, BCC and Churchill (in Montgomery Co, MD). Not sure why, but it is disturbing.
Source? This is the kind of data I'd like to see, but I want to see actual data rather than rumor, reputation and speculation.
There has been some discussion of these sorts of questions on the College forum. I think there was a VA-related spinoff to this thread, which discusses results in the Bethesda schools: http://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/669618.page
http://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/669618.page
That's a little hard to compare because they're looking at only select high schools in the system (and some of the strongest at that) whereas the APS data looks at the entire school system.
Arlington Magazine breaks it down by high school: HBW, W-L, Ytown, Wakefield. Compare those rates against the Montgomery County School rates quoted below, and APS doesn't measure up. I would feel better if the Arlington Magazine numbers were all wrong, but that's wishful thinking.
***
Bethesda Magazine made its annual chart for college acceptances public to non-subscribers recently: http://www.bethesdamagazine.com/Bethesda-Magazine/...er-October-2017/College-Bound/ Here are some acceptance rates for top schools with the 2017 acceptance rate overall in parentheses as comparison. Seems like a strong year overall.
Acceptance rates at some top universities:
Brown- 5.6% (compared to 9% overall)
Caltech- 12.5% (8%)
Columbia- 7.1% (6%)
Carnegie Mellon- 31.9% (14%)
Dartmouth- 12.1% (10%)
Cornell- 17.2% (13%)
Duke- 13.1% (10%)
Emory- 23.1% (22%)
Georgetown- 22.5% (16%)
Harvard- 4.2% (5%)
Hopkins- 9.5% (11%)
MIT- 10.4% (7%)
Northwestern- 8.9% (9%)
Rice- 15.6% (16%)
Stanford- 5% (5%)
Berkeley- 23.5% (18%)
UCLA- 28.3% (16%)
UChicago- 9.4% (8%)
U of M- 30% (27%)
UPenn- 10.6% (9%)
USCal- 22.4% (17%)
UVA- 14% (27%)
Vanderbilt- 11.1% (10%)
WashU- 26.9% (17%)
Yale- 11.2% (7%)
Acceptance rates at some top SLACs:
Amherst- 13.2% (12%)
Bowdoin- 8.2% (15%)
Carleton- 34% (21%)
Claremont McKenna College- 0% (11%)
Davidson- 29.7% (20%)
Middlebury-22.8% (20%)
Pomona- 6.1% (8%)
Swarthmore- 11.5% (10%)
Wellesley- 36.3% (22%)
Williams- 12.7% (15%)