Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:lol there aint no denying for elite schools TJ does no better than your average upper SES school
lolz lolz lolz
Keep telling your self that while TJ kids continue with the best college admissions results in the country.
That's because of the quality of the students, not the high school itself. If those kids had all stayed at their base schools and you posted admission information for them, the results would probably be just as good if not better.
Would you say the same thing to a smart STEM kid who got into Caltech to go to GMU instead of Caltech since you may have a higher chance of getting into a better grad school from GMU with likely higher gpa?
Number of TJ grads going to Caltech: 1
Misleading.
26 applied
4 admitted (15% admit rate from TJ vs 9% overall admit rate).
Vs the other top STEM schools (MIT, CMU, Berkeley, GT, UCIC), Cal Tech has a lot less TJ interest, and a fraction of the TJ applicants.
For example, Berkeley. Also a UC. Only one position different in engineering rankings. 97 applied, 34 admitted, 11 attending.
No idea what the difference is.
Caltech is not a UC.
Also, it's UIUC NOT UCIC or UICU. You should take your med before posting anything further. Remember, it's UIUC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:lol there aint no denying for elite schools TJ does no better than your average upper SES school
lolz lolz lolz
Keep telling your self that while TJ kids continue with the best college admissions results in the country.
That's because of the quality of the students, not the high school itself. If those kids had all stayed at their base schools and you posted admission information for them, the results would probably be just as good if not better.
Would you say the same thing to a smart STEM kid who got into Caltech to go to GMU instead of Caltech since you may have a higher chance of getting into a better grad school from GMU with likely higher gpa?
Number of TJ grads going to Caltech: 1
Misleading.
26 applied
4 admitted (15% admit rate from TJ vs 9% overall admit rate).
Vs the other top STEM schools (MIT, CMU, Berkeley, GT, UCIC), Cal Tech has a lot less TJ interest, and a fraction of the TJ applicants.
For example, Berkeley. Also a UC. Only one position different in engineering rankings. 97 applied, 34 admitted, 11 attending.
No idea what the difference is.
You are the one who brought up Caltech! LOLZ LOLZ LOLZ LOLZ LOLZ
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:lol there aint no denying for elite schools TJ does no better than your average upper SES school
lolz lolz lolz
Keep telling your self that while TJ kids continue with the best college admissions results in the country.
That's because of the quality of the students, not the high school itself. If those kids had all stayed at their base schools and you posted admission information for them, the results would probably be just as good if not better.
Would you say the same thing to a smart STEM kid who got into Caltech to go to GMU instead of Caltech since you may have a higher chance of getting into a better grad school from GMU with likely higher gpa?
Number of TJ grads going to Caltech: 1
Misleading.
26 applied
4 admitted (15% admit rate from TJ vs 9% overall admit rate).
Vs the other top STEM schools (MIT, CMU, Berkeley, GT, UCIC), Cal Tech has a lot less TJ interest, and a fraction of the TJ applicants.
For example, Berkeley. Also a UC. Only one position different in engineering rankings. 97 applied, 34 admitted, 11 attending.
No idea what the difference is.
Caltech is not a UC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:lol there aint no denying for elite schools TJ does no better than your average upper SES school
lolz lolz lolz
Keep telling your self that while TJ kids continue with the best college admissions results in the country.
That's because of the quality of the students, not the high school itself. If those kids had all stayed at their base schools and you posted admission information for them, the results would probably be just as good if not better.
Would you say the same thing to a smart STEM kid who got into Caltech to go to GMU instead of Caltech since you may have a higher chance of getting into a better grad school from GMU with likely higher gpa?
Number of TJ grads going to Caltech: 1
Misleading.
26 applied
4 admitted (15% admit rate from TJ vs 9% overall admit rate).
Vs the other top STEM schools (MIT, CMU, Berkeley, GT, UCIC), Cal Tech has a lot less TJ interest, and a fraction of the TJ applicants.
For example, Berkeley. Also a UC. Only one position different in engineering rankings. 97 applied, 34 admitted, 11 attending.
No idea what the difference is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:lol there aint no denying for elite schools TJ does no better than your average upper SES school
lolz lolz lolz
Keep telling your self that while TJ kids continue with the best college admissions results in the country.
That's because of the quality of the students, not the high school itself. If those kids had all stayed at their base schools and you posted admission information for them, the results would probably be just as good if not better.
Would you say the same thing to a smart STEM kid who got into Caltech to go to GMU instead of Caltech since you may have a higher chance of getting into a better grad school from GMU with likely higher gpa?
Number of TJ grads going to Caltech: 1
Misleading.
26 applied
4 admitted (15% admit rate from TJ vs 9% overall admit rate).
Vs the other top STEM schools (MIT, CMU, Berkeley, GT, UCIC), Cal Tech has a lot less TJ interest, and a fraction of the TJ applicants.
For example, Berkeley. Also a UC. Only one position different in engineering rankings. 97 applied, 34 admitted, 11 attending.
No idea what the difference is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:lol there aint no denying for elite schools TJ does no better than your average upper SES school
lolz lolz lolz
Keep telling your self that while TJ kids continue with the best college admissions results in the country.
That's because of the quality of the students, not the high school itself. If those kids had all stayed at their base schools and you posted admission information for them, the results would probably be just as good if not better.
Would you say the same thing to a smart STEM kid who got into Caltech to go to GMU instead of Caltech since you may have a higher chance of getting into a better grad school from GMU with likely higher gpa?
Number of TJ grads going to Caltech: 1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:lol there aint no denying for elite schools TJ does no better than your average upper SES school
lolz lolz lolz
Keep telling your self that while TJ kids continue with the best college admissions results in the country.
That's because of the quality of the students, not the high school itself. If those kids had all stayed at their base schools and you posted admission information for them, the results would probably be just as good if not better.
Would you say the same thing to a smart STEM kid who got into Caltech to go to GMU instead of Caltech since you may have a higher chance of getting into a better grad school from GMU with likely higher gpa?
Number of TJ grads going to Caltech: 1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:lol there aint no denying for elite schools TJ does no better than your average upper SES school
lolz lolz lolz
Keep telling your self that while TJ kids continue with the best college admissions results in the country.
That's because of the quality of the students, not the high school itself. If those kids had all stayed at their base schools and you posted admission information for them, the results would probably be just as good if not better.
Would you say the same thing to a smart STEM kid who got into Caltech to go to GMU instead of Caltech since you may have a higher chance of getting into a better grad school from GMU with likely higher gpa?
Why would you go to grad school in STEM lolz
I mean if your kid really loves research more power to them but you have to realize the huge disconnect of getting an MBA or Law degree or even an MD and then making bank vs getting a grad degree in STEM where you will be making barely anything.
To actually answer your question I would go to GMU why? Your kid would be a star and have access to all the faculty/research projects etc vs having to compete with time and attention from everyone else
All the depressed and addicted lawyers out there (at rates that are multiples of the general public) might say that there is more to life than "making bank". So do many TJ kids. it's not like top CS grads and Engineers are struggling to support themselves. I feel sorry for your kids, if every decision in their lives is focused on how they will grow up and "make bank". . Lolz.
You ever hear of the bamboo ceiling concept it really applies especially since most of TJ is asian these days
Basically most of us are looking for our kids to go higher than worker bees/middle management lolz but keep thinking STEM is the way to being elite
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:lol there aint no denying for elite schools TJ does no better than your average upper SES school
lolz lolz lolz
Keep telling your self that while TJ kids continue with the best college admissions results in the country.
That's because of the quality of the students, not the high school itself. If those kids had all stayed at their base schools and you posted admission information for them, the results would probably be just as good if not better.
Would you say the same thing to a smart STEM kid who got into Caltech to go to GMU instead of Caltech since you may have a higher chance of getting into a better grad school from GMU with likely higher gpa?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:lol there aint no denying for elite schools TJ does no better than your average upper SES school
lolz lolz lolz
Keep telling your self that while TJ kids continue with the best college admissions results in the country.
That's because of the quality of the students, not the high school itself. If those kids had all stayed at their base schools and you posted admission information for them, the results would probably be just as good if not better.
Would you say the same thing to a smart STEM kid who got into Caltech to go to GMU instead of Caltech since you may have a higher chance of getting into a better grad school from GMU with likely higher gpa?
Why would you go to grad school in STEM lolz
I mean if your kid really loves research more power to them but you have to realize the huge disconnect of getting an MBA or Law degree or even an MD and then making bank vs getting a grad degree in STEM where you will be making barely anything.
To actually answer your question I would go to GMU why? Your kid would be a star and have access to all the faculty/research projects etc vs having to compete with time and attention from everyone else
All the depressed and addicted lawyers out there (at rates that are multiples of the general public) might say that there is more to life than "making bank". So do many TJ kids. it's not like top CS grads and Engineers are struggling to support themselves. I feel sorry for your kids, if every decision in their lives is focused on how they will grow up and "make bank". . Lolz.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:lol there aint no denying for elite schools TJ does no better than your average upper SES school
lolz lolz lolz
Keep telling your self that while TJ kids continue with the best college admissions results in the country.
That's because of the quality of the students, not the high school itself. If those kids had all stayed at their base schools and you posted admission information for them, the results would probably be just as good if not better.
Would you say the same thing to a smart STEM kid who got into Caltech to go to GMU instead of Caltech since you may have a higher chance of getting into a better grad school from GMU with likely higher gpa?
Why would you go to grad school in STEM lolz
I mean if your kid really loves research more power to them but you have to realize the huge disconnect of getting an MBA or Law degree or even an MD and then making bank vs getting a grad degree in STEM where you will be making barely anything.
To actually answer your question I would go to GMU why? Your kid would be a star and have access to all the faculty/research projects etc vs having to compete with time and attention from everyone else
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:lol there aint no denying for elite schools TJ does no better than your average upper SES school
lolz lolz lolz
Keep telling your self that while TJ kids continue with the best college admissions results in the country.
That's because of the quality of the students, not the high school itself. If those kids had all stayed at their base schools and you posted admission information for them, the results would probably be just as good if not better.
Would you say the same thing to a smart STEM kid who got into Caltech to go to GMU instead of Caltech since you may have a higher chance of getting into a better grad school from GMU with likely higher gpa?
Why would you go to grad school in STEM lolz
I mean if your kid really loves research more power to them but you have to realize the huge disconnect of getting an MBA or Law degree or even an MD and then making bank vs getting a grad degree in STEM where you will be making barely anything.
To actually answer your question I would go to GMU why? Your kid would be a star and have access to all the faculty/research projects etc vs having to compete with time and attention from everyone else
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:lol there aint no denying for elite schools TJ does no better than your average upper SES school
lolz lolz lolz
Keep telling your self that while TJ kids continue with the best college admissions results in the country.
That's because of the quality of the students, not the high school itself. If those kids had all stayed at their base schools and you posted admission information for them, the results would probably be just as good if not better.
Would you say the same thing to a smart STEM kid who got into Caltech to go to GMU instead of Caltech since you may have a higher chance of getting into a better grad school from GMU with likely higher gpa?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:lol there aint no denying for elite schools TJ does no better than your average upper SES school
lolz lolz lolz
Keep telling your self that while TJ kids continue with the best college admissions results in the country.
That's because of the quality of the students, not the high school itself. If those kids had all stayed at their base schools and you posted admission information for them, the results would probably be just as good if not better.