Anonymous wrote:My kids are at GDS LS. It is definitely worse, but we love our school!
What private school(s) do you think come right after TJ? Our DD is a great student, loves math and applied to TJ this year. Everybody who knows her thinks that she has the highest chances of being accepted, but I'm thinking about plan B. Since now is the private school application season, perhaps it's worth applying to a couple of private schools just in case. Which private schools would you apply?Anonymous wrote:Just 1 point loser than DC. Use the % to compare them.
We all know that TJ kids academically are much more endowed than any top schools in DC/MD/VA. Why can we just accept this as a fact. My own DCs are not in TJ, but by all academic standards, TJ is well above any top private.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I want to add to the poster above. Many of Sidwell's recent admits to HYPS have parents whose accomplishments and achievements you can easily Google. Your daughter's class might have been an exception. It should come as no surprise that accomplished parents often raise ambitious, intelligent children. In the classes I know well, the better known, more famous parents always had their children admitted to the top colleges.
I suppose the real question is whether the school support your ordinary, no-connections kid, as strongly as it does for the connected kids, for college placement among the HYPS? Are the non-connected kids disadvantaged in college placement?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. No, I'm not from this country. I doubt those who tease my grammar can write a word in my language, given the same year of exposure to that language as I was in English. Thanks for all the other posts that are trying to be helpful. We will tour MS and US.
OP, I speak many different languages. In whatever language I speak, I have the emotional intelligence to know that tone matters. Your tone and communication of entitlement is irritating.
My children go to a different Big 3, but I would not want someone like you in my community.
There is no tone in text, choose your interpretation wisely.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Color me impressed. Thomas Jefferson in Fairfax County has about 455 students in its Senior class, and 119 of them, or a quarter of the class, are National Merit Semifinalists.
Yes, and TJ selects all of its students at the 9th grade juncture, with high test scores in hand. As compared to other dc privates, Sidwell regularly compares very favorably in terms of NMSF. Also, the NMSF cutoff is lower for va than dc. I have no idea how many more Sidwell, or other dc school kids, would be NMSF in the Virginia context. I am guessing g that PP us just offering facts to dispel any myth that may be out there that Sidwell students do not stack up well against other dc privates, but rather skate by on their families' status or legacy.
Anonymous wrote:Color me impressed. Thomas Jefferson in Fairfax County has about 455 students in its Senior class, and 119 of them, or a quarter of the class, are National Merit Semifinalists.
Anonymous wrote:
Sidwell is not for intellectuals; it's for the DC glitterati.
Anonymous wrote:I want to add to the poster above. Many of Sidwell's recent admits to HYPS have parents whose accomplishments and achievements you can easily Google. Your daughter's class might have been an exception. It should come as no surprise that accomplished parents often raise ambitious, intelligent children. In the classes I know well, the better known, more famous parents always had their children admitted to the top colleges.
Anonymous wrote:Sidwell is not for intellectuals; it's for the DC glitterati.
Anonymous wrote:I want to add to the poster above. Many of Sidwell's recent admits to HYPS have parents whose accomplishments and achievements you can easily Google. Your daughter's class might have been an exception. It should come as no surprise that accomplished parents often raise ambitious, intelligent children. In the classes I know well, the better known, more famous parents always had their children admitted to the top colleges.