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In reply to the discussion: Well, it has finally been verified... [View all]Jim__
(15,054 posts)56. What do people think of elite schools, for instance, Brooklyn Latin School?
From wikipedia:
The Brooklyn Latin School is a public specialized high school in New York City. It opened in September 2006.[2] The ideals governing Brooklyn Latin are borrowed largely from the Boston Latin School,[3] and popular society's ideals. The schools founding headmaster was Jason Griffiths.[4]
Admission to Brooklyn Latin involves passing the Specialized High Schools Admissions Test. Each November, about 30,000 eighth and ninth graders take the 3-hour test for admittance to eight of the nine specialized high schools. Approximately 200 applicants are accepted each year. It is the second specialized high school in Brooklyn (along with Brooklyn Technical High School) and has the distinction of being the only specialized high school in which students adhere to a school uniform. The school color, purple, reflects the preference of Roman nobility, who wore robes dyed in that color and is also the school color of the Boston Latin School, another borrowed trait.[citation needed]
The school spent its first five years at 325 Bushwick Avenue, in limited space. In 2013 it moved to 223 Graham Avenue, not far from the previous school.[5] In that same year it was named as one of New York State's top public schools.[2]
...
Admission to the Brooklyn Latin School is based exclusively on an entrance examination, known as the Specialized High Schools Admissions Test (SHSAT), open to all eighth and ninth grade New York City students. The test covers math (word problems and computation) and verbal (reading comprehension and grammar) skills. Out of the approximately 30,000 students taking the entrance examination for the September 2011 admission round (with 14,529 students listing Brooklyn Latin as a choice on their application), about 572 offers were made, making for an acceptance rate of 3.9%.[7][8]
Admission to Brooklyn Latin involves passing the Specialized High Schools Admissions Test. Each November, about 30,000 eighth and ninth graders take the 3-hour test for admittance to eight of the nine specialized high schools. Approximately 200 applicants are accepted each year. It is the second specialized high school in Brooklyn (along with Brooklyn Technical High School) and has the distinction of being the only specialized high school in which students adhere to a school uniform. The school color, purple, reflects the preference of Roman nobility, who wore robes dyed in that color and is also the school color of the Boston Latin School, another borrowed trait.[citation needed]
The school spent its first five years at 325 Bushwick Avenue, in limited space. In 2013 it moved to 223 Graham Avenue, not far from the previous school.[5] In that same year it was named as one of New York State's top public schools.[2]
...
Admission to the Brooklyn Latin School is based exclusively on an entrance examination, known as the Specialized High Schools Admissions Test (SHSAT), open to all eighth and ninth grade New York City students. The test covers math (word problems and computation) and verbal (reading comprehension and grammar) skills. Out of the approximately 30,000 students taking the entrance examination for the September 2011 admission round (with 14,529 students listing Brooklyn Latin as a choice on their application), about 572 offers were made, making for an acceptance rate of 3.9%.[7][8]
I know we are concerned about education for all students. But, an excellent education for very good students, based on tests open to all, at least seems like a place to start. I know the Specialized High Schools Admissions Test came under fire during De Blasio's administration, probably legitimately, for being biased.
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I spent my career in education, and sitting through hearings for the State Board of Education
Lonestarblue
Dec 2022
#34
I'm not quite sure that "Morning Joe" is an authority of the ability of American engineering...
NNadir
Dec 2022
#9
Good point, however, there is a large segment of our population that is very poorly educated
dlk
Dec 2022
#11
Speaking of not knowing what we don't know, I would suspect that "Morning Joe" doesn't know...
NNadir
Dec 2022
#26
At wet bulb temperatures of 35C, temperatures which are now appearing all over the world...
NNadir
Dec 2022
#30
Chips are "raw materials" needed for cars, refrigerators, and many items the USA exports
Bernardo de La Paz
Dec 2022
#15
Latin is not required for rigor in education. It is much more useful for health care professionals
Bernardo de La Paz
Dec 2022
#24
Latin will do the job, but French and German and Chinese have their own rigor
Bernardo de La Paz
Dec 2022
#43
There was an excellent segment on 1A radio yesterday about the poor training of the US work force
erronis
Dec 2022
#20
This is the object of charter schools which suck up money from public schools
Stargazer99
Dec 2022
#21
The late George Carlin was right on the money with this regarding education
nightwing1240
Dec 2022
#22
Really good shows on YouTube about the chip industry and how ASML in the Netherlands builds the
Pepsidog
Dec 2022
#25
"no serious attempt"? You just dissed millions of American teachers. . . nt
Bernardo de La Paz
Dec 2022
#47
Reminds me of the first time I discovered high school grads couldn't do long division.
jaxexpat
Dec 2022
#38
I think you'll have to explain your point, at least to me. Others probably get it, I don't. . . .nt
Bernardo de La Paz
Dec 2022
#51
I took two years of Latin in high school .. then two years of French (1962-66)
Bo Zarts
Dec 2022
#46
Definitely a dumbed down population will vote reactionary if frightened, but...
GreenWave
Dec 2022
#59