2025-2026 SEHS Admissions

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    • #18109 Reply
      Lamom
      Guest

      Just heard that scores will be out on November 8. Cutoffs dropped last year, any predictions for this year?

    • #18191 Reply
      CPSMOM
      Guest

      Where did you hear that scores will be released 11/8?

      • #18192 Reply
        Lamom
        Guest

        From our school counselor — we’re in CPS, assume it applies to everyone but not totally sure about that.

        • #18202 Reply
          CPSMOM
          Guest

          Thanks! We are in CPS too.

    • #18229 Reply
      Lamom
      Guest

      Scores are up!

    • #18230 Reply
      NonCPSmom
      Guest

      Hmm… I am not seeing scores. Anyone else who can see theirs on a 504? Also, shows that my student’s test as a “scheduled event” in blue versus a “completed event” in green

      • #18231 Reply
        Lamom
        Guest

        I think non-cps families take the test later so maybe the scores go up later?

    • #18232 Reply
      Bibidee
      Guest

      Just want to make sure I’m not missing anything. If my kid was in the 99 percentile for reading and math. With all As last year, that should translate to a 900/900. Correct?

      • #18233 Reply
        Lamom
        Guest

        Correct!

    • #18236 Reply
      WBmom
      Guest

      I’m hoping cut off scores stay the same, but have a feeling since my kid is on the cusp, the cutoffs will go up.

      • #18247 Reply
        Lamom
        Guest

        My situation too. Just have no idea if the drop (especially in tier 3) was some sort of issue with the test that year or a secular trend, both are plausible.

    • #18239 Reply
      Mark Robert
      Guest

      Hi my child got a 97 in reading and 92 in math. We are tier 3 and he really wants to go to northside with his brother and sister. Can he get in?

    • #18246 Reply
      HSMom
      Guest

      Mark Robert- based on last year’s scores he would get in but the year before he would not. It really depends on if the trend from last year remains.

    • #18248 Reply
      Mark Robert
      Guest

      Hi thanks. Do you think the cutoff scores will go down or up?

    • #18249 Reply
      Marie
      Guest

      What about Math 99 & Reading 90 , tier 3. Is that good for WY?

      • #18251 Reply
        Lamom
        Guest

        In the last couple of years, that score would get you into WY. You never know if cut scores will change but I think very likely to get in.

    • #18252 Reply
      Sebastian Kindles
      Guest

      Does anyone know if a child has gotten a perfect score. My child goes to a regional gifted center and he says no one he knows got a perfect score. He also said everyone got a low math score. Is this similar to your child?

      • #18269 Reply
        Mom
        Guest

        Not true.my kid got a 900 as did someone else in this post. Historically, the ranked choice cutoff for Payton and Northside is often a perfect 900. Maybe most of the kids who get perfect scores are in private schools, already at academic cneters, or in neighborhood schools because that’s what their families value?

        Anyways, my kid is happy at LTAC and will not be going to a different SE high school. As his parent, I have to be okay with his choice.

        • #18587 Reply
          JaneMama
          Guest

          I think there are more 900s this year

    • #18253 Reply
      One CPS parent
      Guest

      Sebastian, looks like someone on this forum got a perfect score…
      I am wondering what the predictions for this year’s cutoff scores would be for Tier 4, last year were lower but seems like that was an outlier.

    • #18255 Reply
      Bibidee
      Guest

      One thing that I was not previously aware of was that the CPS “grades” on a curve for this test. My kid got his actual test scores, as well as percentiles. My kid did not score perfect on either. I’m only guessing, a perfect score might be like 350 on either test. He was in the 99th percentile on both. Using the rubric, his “weighted” score should be a 900. I was concerned I misinterpreted the results at first but am more confident today. Looking at cut scores from previous years and the hardest schools to get into, I thought it was suspicious at how many “perfect 900s” there were overall. But the curve made it make more sense.

    • #18260 Reply
      IHateThis
      Guest

      99th percentile math, 90th reading, all As in 7th, tier 4

      I think that gets my child an 880 and hopefully into Lane. Guess we just have to wait 4 or 5 more months.

    • #18262 Reply
      Bibidee
      Guest

      Last two years, the bottom cut score for Lane Tech tier 4 was 870. Subject to change but 880 is looking good. If Lane is your kids dream school, Don’t forget about principals discretion. Not a bad idea to get recommendation letters ahead of time. Just in case.

    • #18263 Reply
      AK
      Guest

      To calculate the score into 900, use this:https://drive.google.com/file/d/1_eEs8Xym5IbwVa2_UmifCMM33k95i2SW/view

      The percent score is multiplied to get a number of up to 225 for reading/math. Then you add in the grades, and that is your score out of 900. So, a 99th % on Reading and Math + Straight As should get a 900.

    • #18264 Reply
      AK
      Guest
    • #18267 Reply
      Sebastian Kindles
      Guest

      Hi my son scored 97 on reading as well as 92 on math. Can he make it through northside. We are tier 3.

      • #18268 Reply
        Lamom
        Guest

        Last year he would have been in at Northside, the year before not — so definitely a chance but will just depend on the cut scores.

    • #18277 Reply
      one_more_time
      Guest

      Hello,

      I am curious to hear what were the raw scores for your kids? Mine got 315/332.

      • #18286 Reply
        Bean
        Guest

        hi, do you know what a kids raw score means? I imagine many children will score 99/97 and come from the same tier as my kid. Do you know if these ‘raw” scores help in tiebreakers? Thanks.

      • #18435 Reply
        SEHSbound
        Guest

        @one_more_time what percentiles are those scores and is reading the first number? Thanks for sharing.

      • #18598 Reply
        8th grade student
        Guest

        338 and 295

    • #18281 Reply
      Mama bear
      Guest

      My child got a 62 and 72 percentile, she’s usually a over achiever and does great in school but she scored so low. She’s very disciplined with her score because how much she studied, she really wanted to go to lane or whitney and now she is very drained and things tha she’s not capable because of her score, is there even a possibility for her getting in, also she did get straight a’s in 7th grade.

    • #18282 Reply
      Mama bear
      Guest

      We are also in tier 4 by the way and I know the scores are usually higher,my daughter says she doomed and very dissipointed with her outcome. Also in my first post I mean disappointed not disciplined. Like I was saying how I think this score is really affecting her, she has no appetite and always studying bc she says she just feels so dumb and useless. She has such high expectations for herself that when she got her results she became really disappointed in herself.

      • #18289 Reply
        Hsmom
        Guest

        I’d find someone for her to talk to. Is your neighborhood school an option?

      • #18355 Reply
        Parent123
        Guest

        I just wanted to send you and your daughter some support.

        I’ll be honest, those scores likely won’t work for regular cut scores. If she has some serious reason or something to offer a SEHS, principal’s discretion may be worth a try.

        Meanwhile I would seriously take a look at other choice programs or what your neighborhood school has to offer. Make it action oriented – what can you do next and how can we look at that in a positive light.

    • #18283 Reply
      Bean
      Guest

      Hey everyone,
      Tier 3 here. Hoping to get into WY. I am curious about the standard scores, what purpose do they serve?
      My child’s score.
      Reading Percentile — 97
      Reading Standard Score — 315
      Math Percentile — 99
      Math Standard Score — 322

    • #18295 Reply
      8th grade student
      Guest

      Reading – 90 (297)
      Math – 99 (338)
      Tier 4
      Gives me an 880, I think I could get into Jones or Lane but is there any chance for WY?

    • #18296 Reply
      8th grade student
      Guest

      also straight a’s

    • #18298 Reply
      Marie
      Guest

      Why are the standards scores different even if students have the same percentiles?

      • #18304 Reply
        one_more_time
        Guest

        because percentiles are related to the ranges of the scores.

      • #18426 Reply
        JaneMama
        Guest

        Congrats! Just rank your schools the way you want them. You don’t benefit from putting one in first vs third. Ask your counselor to double check everything too!

    • #18299 Reply
      IN
      Guest

      With 880 in tier 4, any chance for WP or Jones?

      • #18300 Reply
        8th grade student
        Guest

        Jones cutoff is usually around 870s so probably. Payton the cutoff is usually 900 so probably not.

        • #18347 Reply
          IN
          Participant

          Pretty good for an 8th grader to know this stuff!

    • #18310 Reply
      Mama bear
      Guest

      Well our neighborhood highschool is not th best and the programs are not exactly interesting for my daughter, update my daughter is still very dissipointed about her scores and I am debating to get her someone so she could talk to because this is really affecting her and ruining her self esteem. I am telling her that von stuben scholars is a good program and when we went to the open house and she liked it but she even bought the lane sweatshirt bc she wanted to manifest her being there.shes still not having an appetite nor wanting to go out of her room.im really concerned for her and based on her scores of a 62 and 72 it is not exactly lane worthy btw she has all as in 7th grade

      • #18311 Reply
        Lamom
        Guest

        No harm in having her talk to someone. I’m sorry, this is a rough process and I think unfair that our 8th graders have so much pressure and so much riding on a single test. Von Scholars is a wonderful program and might be easier to stand out in a smaller, more personalized program like that than at Lane. There’s also the option of transferring if she really doesn’t feel like the school where she ends up is a fit, all of the SEHS take transfer students and what matters there is grades, essays and recommendations.

        • #18331 Reply
          Mama bear
          Guest

          Yes exactly how I feel, when u were talking about transferring to like lane how can u do that exactly????

        • #18333 Reply
          Mama bear
          Guest

          Though just to be for sure there is no way for my daughter to get into lane correct, because of her score??

          • #18335 Reply
            Lamom
            Guest

            So it looks like this school year, Lane isn’t accepting transfers but here’s an example of what the form would look like if it changes (this would be something you do during your freshman or sophomore year): https://www.wpcp.org/apps/pages/index.jsp?type=d&uREC_ID=410149&pREC_ID=1000141

            For next year the only option would be principals discretion but you are likely right that her scores would make that difficult.

            • #18336 Reply
              Mama bear
              Guest

              Yes it is really disappointing for her, hopefully she does qualify for the von scholars which is still very close to us luckily and seems like a great program!!! Sadly when I told my daughter she said it was good but I could tell by her face she is still in a bad place.

            • #18503 Reply
              Student
              Guest

              Hi! Just letting you know that to get principal discretion is almost impossible. Your student either needs a really good reason(like death of parent or close relative)or have very strong unique extracurriculars which can be useful for high school you are applying to. Or unless her/his older sibling are already at that school than I guess it will work for you.

    • #18315 Reply
      Penny Pam
      Guest

      Hi looks like there aren’t many perfect scores. Seems like the cut off scores will be the same or close to the same. Anyone else agree?

      • #18326 Reply
        8th grade student
        Guest

        Yes, I think for WY, Jones, and Lane it will stay the same or slightly fall. I don’t know about Northside and Payton.

        • #18425 Reply
          JaneMama
          Guest

          I think there are a lot of 900s. My child is one of many in her class with a 900 and Tier 4.

          • #18494 Reply
            LawMom444
            Guest

            Did you use private tutoring…it’s something many dont disclose but when I was asking 9th graders what they did to prepare, many had outside assistance, so once again the wealthier parents are able to provide the resources to have an advantage

            • #18641 Reply
              CPS Parent
              Guest

              I believe that resources to support academic success are available in all communities, regardless of financial status. There are many free tools, like Khan Academy and IXL, that students can use to practice and improve their understanding of various subjects. These resources can make a big difference if students take the initiative to put in the effort.
              Even with outside help, such as tutoring, it ultimately comes down to the student’s willingness to work hard. Tutors can guide and clarify concepts, but they don’t know exactly what will be on the test, and their support is only effective if the student is engaged and motivated. High scores are achieved through consistent practice and effort, not just because of access to tutoring.

              • #18644 Reply
                Sue
                Guest

                Absolutely agreed. We have been using a lot of free anchor charts and resources from various online platforms, and then we also tried tutoring, but because we did not have funds to consistently use tutors, we as parents started digging deeper and found a lot of free resources online. Ultimately it depends on a child, and sometimes we even thought that the fact we did not have funds to use outside help benefited us because in reality nobody cares about your child as much as you do, and where there is a will, there is a way!

    • #18320 Reply
      8th grade student
      Guest

      I got 97 (reading) and 98 (math) with straight A’s, and I live in a tier 1 area. I’m hearing a lot about how the scores are going to go up and stuff, and I would think I’m safe, but you never know, so I would like someone else’s opinion on the matter. For context, Whitney is my 1st choice.

    • #18323 Reply
      IHateThis
      Guest

      8th grade student – I think you’re pretty safely in. Last year an 814 would get you into Whitney from tier 1, and I didn’y computer what your percentiles convert to but probably around 890. Congrats!

      • #18324 Reply
        8th grade student
        Guest

        Thank you for reassuring me 😌

        • #18334 Reply
          one_more_time
          Guest

          it’s 892. with that score, you are getting in. or at least you would have gotten in for any of the last 3 years!
          congrats!

      • #18410 Reply
        Camila
        Guest

        Hi Hailey

    • #18329 Reply
      Patrick Jones
      Guest

      I think the cutoff scores will be going down for all the schools seeing many students in the top selective prep schools not getting perfect scores. Seems like the test was quite difficult? Anyone else agree?

      • #18338 Reply
        Mama bear
        Guest

        My daughter said that there were challenging questions and with only 39 question to finish in 30 minutes was truly stressful for her. And she did say that the last 2 stories in the reading were hard to understand!

        • #18495 Reply
          LawMom444
          Guest

          For the record my daughter said the exact same thing and getting the scores she did took a hit on her self esteem bc she got straight As in 7th grade and in the standarized tests, she always exceeded..

          so, it was quite a shocker when she scored in the 70%

          this whole process is unfair and the thing is if we were in Tier one, she would be able to get into two of the SEHS!

    • #18330 Reply
      Teacher Applere
      Guest

      Hi for anyone trying to go to Northside Whitney Young, Lane, Payton, etc. As long as you have above a 860 you have a good chance of getting in. I’ve heard of many kids who got 850 in tier 4 who got in to Payton because of principal letters. So please parents of students stop stressing. You will get into the school you desire!

    • #18348 Reply
      NDT
      Guest

      *Disclaimer* I do NOT have any concrete insight.

      This is a super stressful process for all who go through it.

      One recurring theme seems to be will the cut scores go up this year?

      If CPS enrollment has been slowly declining over the last 20 years and the number of available freshman seats has stayed the same. In general, it should be getting slightly easier to test in, OVER TIME, as we should see the minimum cut scores required for the different tiers trend downwards. Looking at ONLY the cut scores over the last few years, my theory seems to hold some weight. Even though there are a some outliers with increases.

      Another recurring theme is, how many “perfect 900” scores will I have to compete against?

      Using SUPER rough estimates here: If there are 100K total students across all CPS high schools and a quarter of those go on to be CPS freshman, lets just ballpark and say there are a potential of 25K total scores to compete against. There are three different components to the cut score: 7th grade grades, the math test and the reading test. The amount of cut score points students get assigned is based on a seperate curve, for each test. Meaning that regardless of actual test score, the top one percent (the “99th” percentile) will always get the max score of 225 on each respective test. If 25K students took the test, that means that only 250 kids will get the max of 225 on each respective test. In theory, it’s possible for there to be a maximum of 250 total 900 scores, assuming 25K test takers. However, as there are three seperate components that need to come together and we know some kids scored 99 on one test, but not both. We can say for a fact, there are less 900s out there than the maximum possible.

      All of that to say, there is no need to fear some huge influx of 900s wrecking test curves and driving up cut scores. Again, if overall enrollment continues to decline, the amount of 900s should also trend down over time.

      Looking at cut scores for the last few years, the only school where the amount of 900s has skewed things drastically, is at, is Payton. I believe that their freshman class is about 300 or so. Split 5 ways for top overall score(no tier) and the 4 tiers with seperate cut scores. Looks to be about 60 kids got in with a 900 score, overall. Than basically, all 60 tier 4 spots still needed a score of 900 as well. A few random 900s go elsewhere but it looks like most end up at Payton.

      • #18350 Reply
        Lamom
        Guest

        The Tier 3 cut scores dropped really precipitously last year, I’m expecting somewhat of a rebound. Though it is possible that the population decline and the shrinking middle class means there will be a long term divergence between Tier 4 and the other three tiers.

      • #18411 Reply
        Camila
        Guest

        Hi Fr on my high schools admission test I got a score of 732 and I’m tier 2. I want to get into the selective enrollment Jones. I’m far from the cut off score but I’m closer to the score of Jones pre-law. I don’t live in the required boundaries of Jones pre-law would I still be able to get in with a recommendation letter from a principal? Or I aim for the normal Jones with a recommendation letter from a principal?

        • #18415 Reply
          Lamom
          Guest

          Hi — no one knows yet what the cutoff scores will be so rank Jones first under Selective enrollment and rank Jones CTE first under choice schools, even if it is a long shot. If you don’t get in, you can try for principal’s discretion for the selective program (they don’t have it for the CTE program). But would be sure to add some backup options to your lists also. Fingers crossed for you!

          • #18437 Reply
            Camila
            Guest

            Ok ty last question I was wondering if I would be able to get into Westinghouse? With a score of 732 and in tier 2. With that should I also ask for a recommendation letter from the principal for that school or Jones?

            • #18438 Reply
              Lamom
              Guest

              You would have gotten in last year with that score. No need to get letters unless you end up submitting an application for principal’s discretion, that process starts after results are released.

              • #18441 Reply
                Camila
                Guest

                Ok thank you

    • #18358 Reply
      ChicagoMom
      Guest

      Seeking advice: Living in an area that just moved from Tier 3 to 4. Our top choice is Northside Prep and my child scored a 95/93 and is a below the cut off but has lots going for them! They are IEP/505 Plan. Thoughts? We are going to apply and leverage the Principal’s Discretionary process. This is beyone stressful. Good luck parents!

      • #18363 Reply
        IHateThis
        Guest

        ChicagoMom – Our elementary school held a meeting about the whole admissions process and I think I recall them saying that the SEHS need to admit a class where 13% of them have IEPs. So, if Lane has 1,000 slots, 130 of them are reserved for students with IEPs. No idea of the details on that – there would be different cutoff scores for students with IEPs, I guess? Maybe your school’s social work or counselor would have info on that.

    • #18362 Reply
      IN
      Participant

      Thx

    • #18371 Reply
      KK
      Guest

      How does student rank affect things?

    • #18379 Reply
      CPS Mom
      Guest

      Hi my child scores a 97 and 92 which is a 879. We live in tier 3. Our top choice is northside and we have two siblings there. Are they going to be accepted considering the cutoff scores will remain mostly the same seeing mostly the same results from last year?

    • #18383 Reply
      LawMom444
      Guest

      To MamaBear Guest, unfortunately the odds are stacked against students as this process IS very cut throat.

      My daughter too, scored in the same range despite consistently being a straigh A student and scoring high on those tests that supposedly told her she was at an 11th geade level in math, so seeing her percentile in the 70s was quite discouraging for the both of us…

      my best advice is to remind your daughter that this test does NOT define her…so many students do use private tutoring and that is quite expensive plus she is also competing against students who come from private schools.

      I was told by another parent that works for CPS that MANY students from private schools also apply and get offers so it is not just CPS students..

      In any event, if this helps, my friend’s daughter was accepted to YALE! She also received offers from MIT and Duke University..and guess what, she didnt receive not one offer from a SEHS…she ended up at Noble Academy but now 4 yrs later shes going to friggin YALE

      her life is NOT doomed bc she was not accepted…and she needs to give herself some grace…that is what I tell my daughter….you are only doomed if you believe this to be true…..

      • #18391 Reply
        one_more_time
        Guest

        Thank you for saying this!
        Many parents need to hear it and pass this wisdom to their children.

    • #18390 Reply
      Jennifer B
      Guest

      We are in a Tier 3 and my daughter scored 99/90 which is 880. Trying to decide b/w NCP and Lane to rank as first choice in the application. Should we put NCP first and hope she lucks out in Principal Discretion or put Lane first and play safe? Any advice would be appreciated. Thanks!

      • #18392 Reply
        Lamom
        Guest

        There’s no risk in ranking the schools in your actual order of preference, so definitely put NCP first if that’s your first choice.

    • #18395 Reply
      Raj A
      Guest

      Any guidance on Hancock School ? How is it ? It seems to be located close to Midway Airport – How do students commute from the loop ?

    • #18396 Reply
      Dave P
      Guest

      Really appreciate everyone who’s answering questions here. I believe I’m understanding everything correctly, but just to get a second opinion, our daughter, with a 900 score, would likely get an offer from her first choice, regardless of Tier? In this case, Young.

      • #18398 Reply
        ParentOfThree
        Guest

        @Dave P – Yes, with a 900 score you will very likely get an offer from the first choice regardless of Tier. There is only 1 year in which this did not happen, and it only didn’t happen for specifically Payton. 886 Tier 4 is the highest score that has ever not been offered from Young as first choice.

        • #18400 Reply
          Dave P
          Guest

          @ParentOfThree Thanks! Appreciate the confirmation.

    • #18404 Reply
      CPS Mom
      Guest

      Hi is an 879 good enough for northside in tier 3.

    • #18409 Reply
      Camila
      Guest

      Hi guys on my high schools admission test I got a score of 732 and I’m tier 2. I want to get into the selective enrollment Jones. I’m far from the cut off score but I’m closer to the score of Jones pre-law. I don’t live in the required boundaries of Jones pre-law would I still be able to get in with a recommendation letter from a principal? Or I aim for the normal Jones with a recommendation letter from a principal?

      • #18440 Reply
        WBmom
        Guest

        Camila, the Jones pre-law program is a choice program, which does not have a principal’s discretion option. Principal’s discretion is only for selective enrollment high schools.

    • #18416 Reply
      Cps Mother
      Guest

      Camila sweetie I don’t think you can at least it’s not looking very promising.

      • #18419 Reply
        Camila
        Guest

        Broooo I can get into Hancock bc I’m over the score thingy and I’m in the district

    • #18429 Reply
      Camila
      Guest

      Hi again I was wondering if I would be able to get into Westinghouse? With a score of 732 and in tier 2. With that should I also ask for a recommendation letter from the principal for that school or Jones?

    • #18447 Reply
      Silvia’s mom
      Guest

      Does anyone have the document that has all the school’s acceptance scores out of the 900?

    • #18449 Reply
      CPS Parent
      Guest

      This whole process is really stressful, especially for Tier 4 kids. But let’s not let the scores discourage our children—they don’t define who they are. Ultimately, I believe that each of our kids will find the right school where they can truly thrive. Often, bright students who don’t attend a selective enrollment high school end up excelling and even go on to Ivy League colleges, as they can stand out and achieve top grades without as much competition. Let’s stay positive!

      • #18470 Reply
        LawMom444
        Guest

        Very true, I just wrote about this exact thing in another post too..

        My daughter would’ve gotten in if she was in “tier 1” even though in her school one big street divides Tier 3 and Tier 4 but attend the same elementary school and I sure as heck could not afford private tutoring….

        My friends daughter was rejected at all SEHS and ended up in a charter school. She recently received offers from 3 Ivy Leagues and she chose Yale.!!

    • #18460 Reply
      Just AParent
      Guest

      Hello,

      Considering applying to a CPS SEHS for the 2026-2027 school year. My child is currently in 7th grade, private school, on trimesters.

      Which grades will we need to report/submit, all trimester grades or just the last trimester?

      At my kids school a 90% is a B, does CPS factor that?

      Thank you

      • #18493 Reply
        AK
        Guest

        It’s the final average grade, so for a student on a trimester schedule, it will be the average of all three grades.

        I would call and ask the OAE about the 90% being a B at your current school; they do answer the phone and are generally helpful.

    • #18463 Reply
      new dad in town
      Guest

      Hello Everyone: Thanks so much for all the info you’re sharing. It is tremendously helpful. So, we’ll be moving with my daughter to Chi from South Bend this Summer. This CPS process is entirely new and unfamiliar, and rather bewildering, to be frank. I have a couple of questions: 1) Just out of curiosity, do students usually study or prepare for the HSAT? Is it even possible to? 2) We are Tier 3. My daughter’s percentiles are 97R(315) / 99M(322). That appears to translate to a 445. Her grades amount to 450, for a total of 895. From what I gather from previous comments and links, this puts her in a good position? It appears that (as Tier 3) it might even put her in contention for admission to Payton? Are there any other steps to this process? (for example, submitting recommendation letters? Admission essays? What is the “Principal’s discretion” aspect?). We’ve ordered her schools as Payton, Jones, WY, Northside, Lane (the latter two– NS and Lane– will likely be too far of a commute from where he plan to move to). Jones may be more like a ‘neighborhood school’ and Young a lengthier, but workable, commute. All these schools get such rave reviews, super high rankings, and are described so beautifully. Any thoughts on differences between Jones and Young that are SO significant that we might consider switching the order? Any thoughts or suggestions, however random, are most appreciated!

      • #18498 Reply
        AK
        Guest

        Regular admission is based solely on grades, test scores, and tier; no need for recommendation letters, etc.

        Principal Discretion is a process that occurs AFTER the initial offers go out (sometime in the spring of 2025). For PD, you will need a letter/statement from the student, up to three letters of recommendation, and a student resume.

        Your PD application needs to be under one of four categories:
        1. Unique skills or abilities (sports, music, arts, etc)
        2. Activities documenting social responsibility (volunteering, etc)
        3. Extenuating circumstances (homelessness, major family disruption, etc)
        4. Demonstrated ability to overcome hardship

        Pick which of the above categories applies to your situation and go from there. You can only submit a PD application for 1 school, and you must have applied to that school for regular decision.

        https://www.cps.edu/gocps/high-school/results/principal-discretion/

    • #18466 Reply
      CPS Mom
      Guest

      Is sibling priority a thing for northside and also what does it do? We are tier 3 with my kiddo scoring a 879. Can anyone help if it is a go for Northside?

    • #18548 Reply
      :)
      Guest

      I got 866 tier 3, do you think I will get into WP? Also what I heard from classmates that the test was glitching(most people who said that took the test on October 20th) Is it true for other cps/non-cps students?

    • #18555 Reply
      CPS Mom
      Guest

      Hi parents! So I just found out that our address switched from tier 3 to tier 2. My kiddo scored a 879 and wants to go to northside. It is very likely he will get in correct. So glad this part of the test is over. Good luck to you kiddos!

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