Hmm that is a very valid point. And I agree with your sentiment, especially the bolded part
And I’m not necessarily saying that all success stories originate from selective schools. I’m saying a great majority do, due to the culture and expectations and academic calibre of peers
Essentially, what I'm trying to get at is this - say you have two students with equal ability, but they have considerable holes in their knowledge and academic foundation. both these students are in year 8.
now, of course assuming that both have equal motivation etc. if both were placed under the same circumstances, let's place student A in James Ruse and the other (Student B)at a normal, comprehensive high school ranked in the 300s.
now student A is going to probably end up being ranked near last in their cohort at Ruse, whereas Student B might be topping at their own school. What is the result of this? Student A, at some point, is
more likely to pull up their socks at some point and fix up those gaps, due to lower ranking in their grade and what they see as disappointing results, as gauged by a low ranking. Whereas student B is
more likely to think that they are coasting and everything is fine, and no areas of weakness have to be dealt with.
It’s part of human nature to gauge our results and ability by
comparing ourselves to others, in this case to the rest of our cohort.
So that’s why I believe you get more success stories at selective schools, because what you’re surrounded with is a big catalyst for drastic improvements.
But this is just my opinion.