Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:40-50 kids doesn't sound like that much to me considering they will overenroll the class. If you figure there are 10-12 spots left after Beauvoir boys, that's almost a 1 in 2 shot you'll get in. Granted, some of those slots may be for sibs, but depending on the year, it still may not be that bad.
They test on more than one day. It's at least double if not triple or more kids you're competing with.
If they test on one day, then why do they only list one test day for C Formers on their web site?????
The Beauvoir boys have a separate day of testing.
There is also a make-up day, and special testing set aside for special candidates (read - Saudi prince types, and kids of recently elected senators and the like).
Last year there were only 40-50 boys present for the test, and the AD told me that everyone had made it in for testing. No one was talking about the Beauvoir boys being included in the 40-50 boys who were present at this year's test.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:40-50 kids doesn't sound like that much to me considering they will overenroll the class. If you figure there are 10-12 spots left after Beauvoir boys, that's almost a 1 in 2 shot you'll get in. Granted, some of those slots may be for sibs, but depending on the year, it still may not be that bad.
They test on more than one day. It's at least double if not triple or more kids you're competing with.
If they test on one day, then why do they only list one test day for C Formers on their web site?????
The Beauvoir boys have a separate day of testing.
There is also a make-up day, and special testing set aside for special candidates (read - Saudi prince types, and kids of recently elected senators and the like).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:40-50 kids doesn't sound like that much to me considering they will overenroll the class. If you figure there are 10-12 spots left after Beauvoir boys, that's almost a 1 in 2 shot you'll get in. Granted, some of those slots may be for sibs, but depending on the year, it still may not be that bad.
They test on more than one day. It's at least double if not triple or more kids you're competing with.
If they test on one day, then why do they only list one test day for C Formers on their web site?????
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:40-50 kids doesn't sound like that much to me considering they will overenroll the class. If you figure there are 10-12 spots left after Beauvoir boys, that's almost a 1 in 2 shot you'll get in. Granted, some of those slots may be for sibs, but depending on the year, it still may not be that bad.
They test on more than one day. It's at least double if not triple or more kids you're competing with.
Anonymous wrote:40-50 kids doesn't sound like that much to me considering they will overenroll the class. If you figure there are 10-12 spots left after Beauvoir boys, that's almost a 1 in 2 shot you'll get in. Granted, some of those slots may be for sibs, but depending on the year, it still may not be that bad.
Anonymous wrote:.Anonymous wrote:This was also my son's experience last weekend. It's a relief to hear that we are not alone in this process. We are also applying from public school and it seems as though we are the only family applying this year.
My question is - will we see the results of the test? And if so, when?
PP did you get the sense that most of the kids completing the test last weekend were from other independent schools? We picked up late, so didn't get a sense of how many kids were there competing for those non-Beauvoir spots. Any idea of how many are applying?
Anonymous wrote:The STA test is used for admissions, yes, but also for determining class placement among the boys who eventually attend. So there are questions in there they don't expect many of the kids to get, since it can lead to 2-3 levels of math classes, more when there are kids who place above grade level. I'm not saying this well, so as an example - a 7th grader coud end up in one of 2-3 math levels or even an 8th and 9th grade math classes depending on results.
Anonymous wrote:Not to discourage families, but from my experience, most of the non-Beauvoir slots are eaten up by siblings. If there are 15 spaces for non-Beauvoir incoming C-formers, a good 6-7 are siblings of older boys at the school. As to where they went to school, I would argue it really doesn't matter. The decising factor in their acceptance was not their school (or performance) but in their family. In my son's entering C form, only about 5-6 boys were non-Beauvoir, non-sibling.
Anonymous wrote:from our experience the non beauvoir C form is usually head and shoulders above those beauvoir boys. Way better at math, typically, and there is always the joke that you can tell the beauvoir boys because they cannot open their lockers themselves.
the other boys come from everywhere, depending on the year but typically you see public schools (DC, MD and VA) and then also some privates -- we had boys from Concord Hill, WES, NPS, St Patrick's, WIS, Potomac, among others. Entry for 7th and 9th is also huge, with many coming from privates that end in 6th or 8th or public schools too.By middle of the year, no one cares by the way who was at beauvoir and who was not.