I'm curious to see what you all think about this, because we've been discussing it in my English class and the response of the students was overwhelmingly against this. For this year's eighth graders, there will be no more entrance requirements to get into any program in the Minneapolis Public Schools.
Personally, I think this is definitely a good thing. High school is about figuring it out, and you should be able to choose where you want to go, regardless of your middle school grades (which may or may not accurately portray your effort or potential as a student).
However, most IB students (especially this year's freshman class) do not see it this way. I was shocked to hear many students say things like, banishing entrance requirements will "dumb down IB", or our school will become "like North High". It bugs me so much how elitist these kids are!! We've been told all through middle school and the admittance process that IB is the best and we are the smartest kids. And IBers want to keep it that way.
To be honest, I've been having a tough time keeping my grades up and I was an straight-A student in middle school...I can't imagine anyone with lower grades would even want to come to IB! But if they do, more power to 'em, I say.
I want to know what you all think...I felt like such an outsider when we had to write papers about this and I was one of three kids in a class of 33 who stood in support of getting rid of requirements.
I'd also be interested to hear what 8th graders think...I know some have switched to Anwatin (pre-IB) in hopes of bettering their odds of getting into Southwest. It's all very interesting.
Another thing I've been meaning to bring to the forums...I know a bunch of parents who have gone to meetings about the high school transition and were appalled by MPS's disorganization and incompetence in explaining all of this. I know three sets of parents, none of whom know each other, who all said if they didn't already have kids in MPS, they would never send them. Which is really sad.
Tags: entrance, high, more, no, requirements, school, transition
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