Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:i learned from counselor conference today that TJ acceptance for UVA is 17% only for class 2025. That is shockingly low.
UVA accepted only 11% of in-state applicants, 17% from TJHSST is great!. 85 kids if everyone applied, not bad!
If 17% committed, that is a different story
UVA accepted almost 25% of in state applicants (including ED, EA, and RD):
Overall Admission Statistics
Total applications: 64,463 (58,995 last year)
Total VA applications: 17,608 (16,455)
Total OOS applications: 46,855 (42,540)
Overall VA acceptance rate: 23% (25.5%)
Overall OOS acceptance rate: 12.5% (13%)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:i learned from counselor conference today that TJ acceptance for UVA is 17% only for class 2025. That is shockingly low.
UVA accepted only 11% of in-state applicants, 17% from TJHSST is great!. 85 kids if everyone applied, not bad!
If 17% committed, that is a different story
UVA accepted almost 25% of in state applicants (including ED, EA, and RD):
Overall Admission Statistics
Total applications: 64,463 (58,995 last year)
Total VA applications: 17,608 (16,455)
Total OOS applications: 46,855 (42,540)
Overall VA acceptance rate: 23% (25.5%)
Overall OOS acceptance rate: 12.5% (13%)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:i learned from counselor conference today that TJ acceptance for UVA is 17% only for class 2025. That is shockingly low.
UVA accepted only 11% of in-state applicants, 17% from TJHSST is great!. 85 kids if everyone applied, not bad!
If 17% committed, that is a different story
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:i learned from counselor conference today that TJ acceptance for UVA is 17% only for class 2025. That is shockingly low.
UVA accepted only 11% of in-state applicants, 17% from TJHSST is great!. 85 kids if everyone applied, not bad!
Anonymous wrote:i learned from counselor conference today that TJ acceptance for UVA is 17% only for class 2025. That is shockingly low.
Anonymous wrote:i learned from counselor conference today that TJ acceptance for UVA is 17% only for class 2025. That is shockingly low.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's interesting to see people are pitted for fighting to get in TJ like in hunger game. The better questions to ask are
FCPS is one of the richest county in US, why can they provide more advanced STEM courses to more base high schools?
Instead, FCPS played political games, pick the kids who couldn't take up the challenge of what advanced STEM TJ courses are designed for in name of equity. This does more harm to those kids than help them, only to satisfy the some people's political agenda.
There are plenty of advanced post-BC Calc classes at many FCPS high schools. That's not an issue or a problem to be solved.
Anonymous wrote:It's interesting to see people are pitted for fighting to get in TJ like in hunger game. The better questions to ask are
FCPS is one of the richest county in US, why can they provide more advanced STEM courses to more base high schools?
Instead, FCPS played political games, pick the kids who couldn't take up the challenge of what advanced STEM TJ courses are designed for in name of equity. This does more harm to those kids than help them, only to satisfy the some people's political agenda.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The coming enrollment cliff in college admissions will probably change a lot of college acceptance stats. Entering freshmen at TJ or anywhere else are going to be part of those new numbers so you might be missing some data asking about graduating seniors rn.
Yes, TJ is poised to do well because of this and the enhanced selection process that eliminated the rampant cheating.
Oh give it a break. Nobody thinks the new admissions process is more selective than the old one. Nobody thinks that kids cheated their way into TJ under the old system.
FCPS decided to create a system that would improve diversity at a time when taking affirmative actions to improve diversity was still legal. That's a political decision they could make at the time. They couldn't do this today.
The average PSAT score dropped 140 points and we expect the average SAT scores to drop by a similar amount. That's not the end of the world but it's student body is definitely less academically qualified.
Most people know it is since prior to the reform there was rampant chanting.
There is rampant cheating at the school now.
Langley High school has more cheating than TJ
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC is currently Sophomore at TJ.
Taking pre-calc.
Half the class is struggling. Latest test, mid-term - class average was 62 - thats a F.
You can imagine what this does to college applications.
Unless ur kid is out of this world smart and good at math - TJ is not good for college applications.
Base school has many of the same courses up to AP Calc BC and no reason to stress at TJ
The fukken games these teachers play with grades is criminal. A kid getting a B will get a 5 on the AP exam in a lot of classes
Yep - Calc BC grade of C+ and 5 on the AP exam.
There should be a rule about that. That is borderline abusive.
AP Calc BC vast majority around the country score a 5.
Just looked for 2024: https://apstudents.collegeboard.org/about-ap-scores/score-distributions
Only 21% get a 5, so not vast majority. Vast majority (64%) get 3+
Exam/Score 5 4 3 2 1 +3
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
AP Calculus AB 21.4% 27.8% 15.3% 22.7% 12.9% 64.4%
AP Calculus BC 47.7% 21.1% 12.1% 13.9% 5.2% 80.9%
Yeah for BC, taken by most advanced students, close to 50% get a 5
Yes. And? It's ~50% getting an A obscene?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The coming enrollment cliff in college admissions will probably change a lot of college acceptance stats. Entering freshmen at TJ or anywhere else are going to be part of those new numbers so you might be missing some data asking about graduating seniors rn.
Yes, TJ is poised to do well because of this and the enhanced selection process that eliminated the rampant cheating.
Oh give it a break. Nobody thinks the new admissions process is more selective than the old one. Nobody thinks that kids cheated their way into TJ under the old system.
FCPS decided to create a system that would improve diversity at a time when taking affirmative actions to improve diversity was still legal. That's a political decision they could make at the time. They couldn't do this today.
The average PSAT score dropped 140 points and we expect the average SAT scores to drop by a similar amount. That's not the end of the world but it's student body is definitely less academically qualified.
Most people know it is since prior to the reform there was rampant chanting.
There is rampant cheating at the school now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC is currently Sophomore at TJ.
Taking pre-calc.
Half the class is struggling. Latest test, mid-term - class average was 62 - thats a F.
You can imagine what this does to college applications.
Unless ur kid is out of this world smart and good at math - TJ is not good for college applications.
Base school has many of the same courses up to AP Calc BC and no reason to stress at TJ
The fukken games these teachers play with grades is criminal. A kid getting a B will get a 5 on the AP exam in a lot of classes
Yep - Calc BC grade of C+ and 5 on the AP exam.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC is currently Sophomore at TJ.
Taking pre-calc.
Half the class is struggling. Latest test, mid-term - class average was 62 - thats a F.
You can imagine what this does to college applications.
Unless ur kid is out of this world smart and good at math - TJ is not good for college applications.
Base school has many of the same courses up to AP Calc BC and no reason to stress at TJ
TBH, this is due to admission policy changes starting class 2025 onwards. I know all the parents of TJ students would like to think their children are picked because their academics are stronger than their cohort, but that's not the case starting from class 2025.
The kids were on higher math level that were not being picked for TJ, they stayed in base high school and run out of math classes to take on senior or even junior year. While kids on normal math level got pushed to TJ can't take up the challenge of TJ advanced courses, this is how twisted the admission policy changed into.
That's just fake news. The admission policy admits only the top students. Previously the bar was much lower when they were admitting only kids whose families bought the test answers.
The admission policy served its purpose of opening up the school to students from every middle school. This is a good thing and it is legal. But let's not try and pretend that the end result captures more of northern Virginia's top students. It just isn't true, but I don't care. Opening the school to gurantee seats for all middle schools is a good policy.