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re: Damn I’m glad I live in the south.
Posted on 1/9/20 at 1:29 pm to Eurocat
Posted on 1/9/20 at 1:29 pm to Eurocat
quote:
I love living on Long Island and am sad that the OP Original Poster was so aggressivelt dissmive.
I've spent a lot of time on the campus of Emory Univ, Druid Hills near Atlanta, Ga. They refer to 'Islanders.'
Me: 'What's that?'
Them: 'Girls from Long Island, NY. They have no manners at all. The girls curse like sailors. And they're ugly as hell.'
Posted on 1/9/20 at 1:33 pm to Eurocat
quote:
Damn I'm glad I live in the North.
My wife and kids live seperately from me (not due to marital problems, taking care of a health issue here) and we spent two weeks together.
We did an Islander game, a Brooklyn Nets game, Chinese delivery (exotic for them), a Mexican place, Times Square and Rockefeller Center (same trip) and my 9 year old was thrilled to see Lion King. We have local ice skating (for free from the town) and hourly health walks in the park (free).
I love living on Long Island and am sad that the OP Original Poster was so aggressivelt dissmive.
Schools?
Here are the top three schools in NYC, this is according to the NYPost, same owner as Fox News so lets not talk about "fake news" here.
The top 40 public high schools in NYC
By Mary Kay Linge and Joshua Tanzer
Admission to these selective schools is not based on entrance exams like the SHSAT, but mostly on middle-school grades, state exam scores, attendance and punctuality. Some give priority to continuing 8th graders or to certain residents. Other top-ranked schools are listed in sections on early college , arts/performing arts, career and technical education, CTE.
1. Townsend Harris High School
# Taking AP tests: 309
AP Pass rate: 90.3%
This highly desired Flushing school appeals to motivated high-achievers from all five boroughs. In 2015, 5,996 applied for 306 freshman seats. With an emphasis on the classics, all students take two years of Greek or Latin. The rich curriculum seeks to instill a mastery of the humanities and an appreciation of nature, the arts, math and science. All classes are honors, AP or college level. Offers career and technical education courses in engineering, law, scientific research and audiovisual technology. The building boasts a DNA lab and TV studio. Scholars conduct research at Queens College, NYU and Rockefeller University. Seniors earn tuition-free credits at Queens College and have access to the campus gym, library and cafeteria. The school buzzes with more than 25 clubs, 32 sports teams, and several academic societies.
The Steel Hawks robotics team has won awards at world championship events, and the school took top honors in the NYC Science Olympiad in 2016 and 2015. Kids take two trips abroad each year.
2. Eleanor Roosevelt High School
Admission: Priority to District 2; grades 91--100; state exams: Levels 3.3-4.5; attendance
Graduation rate: 100%
College ready: 99.2%
College enrollment: 95.3%
Taking AP tests: 111
AP Pass rate: 91%
Coveted Upper East Side school prizes community service along with academics. Its 125 freshman seats attracted 5,582 applications in 2015. Offers 11 AP classes, a college English class in partnership with St. John’s University and an array of science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) and arts classes. Starting this year, all students can take AP World History in 10th grade and AP US History in 11th. Science and math are required all four years. The affectionately nicknamed “ElRo” has the only high school team competing in the city’s annual Canstruction competition. Joining professional architects and engineers, students collect hundreds of cans of food, use them to build giant art pieces, then donate them to a food pantry. The ElRo Sibs peer leadership program pairs seniors with ninth- and 10th-graders for mentoring. There are 30 clubs and 16 PSAL sports, including a new indoor track team. The renovated music room added 200 square feet of instructional space in 2016.
3. New Explorations into Science, Technology and Math
Admission: Priority to continuing 8th graders; grades 83--100; state exams: Levels 2.7-4.5; attendance; on-site test
Enrollment: 1,735
Graduation rate: 97.5%
College ready: 96.7%
College enrollment: 82.3%
% Taking SAT: 91
Average total SAT score: 1859
# Taking AP tests: 116
AP Pass rate: 85.3%
The city’s only K-12 gifted school, NEST+m offers AP classes starting in ninth grade and accelerated math and science programs. Students must submit a special request for testing, and competition for 160 freshman seats is fierce — last year, 3,097 students applied. Electives include digital storytelling, mythology and gymnastics; language courses are offered in Mandarin, Latin, Spanish, Italian and French. The school has many clubs, including robotics and chess, and sports like fencing and track, plus science and arts internship opportunities at local universities. A new student-curated Open Mic series showcases kids’ musical, poetry, comedy and theater talents.
4. Baccalaureate School for Global EducationHelayne Seidman
Admission: Priority to continuing 8th graders; grades 90-100; state exams: Levels 3.1-4.5; attendance
Enrollment: 478
Graduation rate: 100%
College ready: 98.5%
College enrollment: 98.4
% Taking SAT: 98.5%
Average total SAT score: 1881
With a laid-back feel yet ambitious mission, this 7-12 Astoria school steers students toward the prestigious International Baccalaureate degree in a light-filled building that was once a pocketbook factory. Juniors and seniors take IB exams for college credits in experimental sciences, math, foreign language (Mandarin, Spanish or French), world literature, history and art. The program requires 100 hours of community service in grades seven to 10, and 150 hours of “creativity, action or service” in grades 11 and 12. Students complete a 4,000-word extended essay on a topic of their choice — anything from “How to Make a Thermoelectric Cooler” to “Writing Fiction Stories.” BNo gym, but an on-site fitness room and yoga/dance studio. Juniors and seniors can leave for lunch.
5. Scholars’ Academy
Admission: Priority to continuing 8th graders; grades, state exams, attendance
Enrollment: 1,302
Graduation rate: 99.2%
College ready: 97.5%
College enrollment: 90.6%
% Taking SAT: 99.2
Average total SAT score: 1716
# Taking AP tests: 87
AP Pass rate: 78.2%
This academically accelerated 6-12 school on the Rockaway peninsula offers an ambitious curriculum and cutting-edge tech to prepare students for 21st-century careers. Kids use iPads, Chromebooks, and MacBooks and choose from 10 AP courses. In the upper grades, they can earn up to 20 college credits through a partnership with St. Francis College in Brooklyn. Exceptional drama club, marching and concert bands and visual arts. The Key Club leads charitable efforts, including the Leaf Crunch cleanup day in Forest Park and food collections for City Harvest.
6. High School for Dual Language and Asian Studies
Admission: Open to NYC; grades 80-100; state exams: Levels 1.9-4.5; attendance
Enrollment: 416
Graduation rate: 92.8%
College ready: 81.4%
College enrollment: 89.8%
% Taking SAT: 95.9
Average total SAT score: 1529
# Taking AP tests: 91
AP Pass rate: 96.7%
English-speaking and Chinese-speaking students become fluent in both languages through this school’s demanding curriculum: students must pass the Chinese Regents test, along with five other state-required exams, to graduate. With a student body 89% Asian, the continent’s cultural themes are explored in every subject. It shares a building with four other high schools, which combined offer 14 PSAL sports teams including badminton and volleyball. Extensive academic support includes SAT prep and Saturday ESL classes.
Is that it ?
Posted on 1/9/20 at 1:37 pm to _Hurricane_
No need to be rude in a "okay flyover country guy, keep flying" kind of way.
I was just answering the question so I have no idea why you choose to be rude to me.
I was just answering the question so I have no idea why you choose to be rude to me.
Posted on 1/9/20 at 1:40 pm to _Hurricane_
Big cities frick people up. Look through the nation, even on the south, the cities are where all the bullshite takes place and it’s because that is where the democrats live. People are not meant to live stacked up on top of each other.
Posted on 1/9/20 at 1:41 pm to Eurocat
Well if you weren’t posting that stuff in bad faith then I apologize. Sounds like a nice place
Posted on 1/9/20 at 1:43 pm to Zach
quote:
I've spent a lot of time on the campus of Emory Univ, Druid Hills near Atlanta, Ga. They refer to 'Islanders.'
Me: 'What's that?'
Them: 'Girls from Long Island, NY. They have no manners at all. The girls curse like sailors. And they're ugly as hell.'
Okay the girls curse like sailors but if you date one, yowzah you will be taken care of in the bedroom but also in the kitchen.
Oh man a Long Island gal cooking Italian, dude, you will gain 100 pounds trust me.
Posted on 1/9/20 at 1:45 pm to Mr. Hangover
quote:
2nd PLACE IN THE CIVIL WAR!!!!! WOOHOO!!!
Yeah, how do you think one would turn out now, a-hole?
Posted on 1/9/20 at 1:48 pm to _Hurricane_
Hurricane...
Sometimes things come across the wrong way on these boards.
Nothing bad intended.
Have a great 2020!
Sometimes things come across the wrong way on these boards.
Nothing bad intended.
Have a great 2020!
Posted on 1/9/20 at 1:52 pm to Eurocat
quote:
Nothing bad intended.
It's just the way you people are. We get it. Just stay up there.
Posted on 1/9/20 at 1:54 pm to _Hurricane_
quote:
I don’t think I could handle living day in day out around a bunch of liberal fricks. The people I’ve met on campus from out of state blow my fricking mind. Yeah we get pissed at each other over football but the baws on this site are bar none the best people out there. I love America as a whole but damn it seems like the South is slowly becoming the only vestige of real American culture outside of the Plains and some of the Rust Belt.
Lower Midwest is pretty MAGA. The KC area is great because the bulk of the suburbs are conservative with a lot of Christians and if you want a little debauchery you can always head into downtown KC. I'm close to retirement and seriously thinking about moving to N Alabama (Lewis Smith Lake) but I could easily stay put and not feel too bad about that decision.....and thanks to climate change it's 63 degrees in KC today.
Posted on 1/9/20 at 1:56 pm to Eurocat
quote:
Oh man a Long Island gal cooking Italian, dude, you will gain 100 pounds trust me
Why would I want to gain 100 pounds?
Posted on 1/9/20 at 1:57 pm to _Hurricane_
American by birth. Southern by the grace of God.
Posted on 1/9/20 at 2:00 pm to _Hurricane_
I am fine with Southerners staying in the South and not moving North. The North is a good place to live and just because you don't like it doesn't mean it's not as good as the South.
Southerners stay in the South!
Southerners stay in the South!
Posted on 1/9/20 at 2:09 pm to damnedoldtigah
I’m from the south and love it. I was quoting Theo Von
Lighten up you pussies
Lighten up you pussies
Posted on 1/9/20 at 2:11 pm to _Hurricane_
Well I haven't seen any
But then my congressman is doing God's work
But then my congressman is doing God's work
Posted on 1/9/20 at 2:26 pm to Ralph_Wiggum
quote:
I am fine with Southerners staying in the South and not moving North. The North is a good place to live and just because you don't like it doesn't mean it's not as good as the South.
Southerners stay in the South!
No one cares what you think commie.
Posted on 1/9/20 at 2:38 pm to Ralph_Wiggum
Isn’t it funny that northerners moving South vastly outnumber southerners moving north. Quite odd.
Posted on 1/9/20 at 2:44 pm to _Hurricane_
The South is certainly the vestige of a part of American culture.
I love the South, but I also enjoyed living in California. There are plenty of conservatives and liberals there. I also met some of the nicest people I know in California.
I love the South, but I also enjoyed living in California. There are plenty of conservatives and liberals there. I also met some of the nicest people I know in California.
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