Help to find best high school in the US to become a theoretical phyicist

In summary, finding the best high school in the US to become a theoretical physicist involves researching schools with strong science and math programs, opportunities for research and internships, and experienced teachers. It is also important to consider the school's location, resources, and extracurricular activities that align with the field of physics. Additionally, seeking guidance from current students and alumni can provide valuable insights into a school's academic rigor and support for future physicists.
  • #1
Jirnyak
19
8
Dear everyone,

My younger brother who is 15 years old and me, both live in the UK. He is determined to become a theoretical physicist like Zeldovich or Ginzburg.
We have an opportunity to send him to a US high school because it is the best place to become and be a physicist.
Could you please suggest good (potentially the best) physical and mathematical high schools in the US to start becoming a physicist?
And of course he will apply to Caltech and MIT because he wants to do physics his whole life.

Thank you for your attention,

My brother and me)
 
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  • #3
What's wrong with Cambridge or Oxford? I doubt they would be any harder to get into than Caltech or MIT especially as an international applicant. Sending him to high school in the US on the minute chance of getting into one of those highly highly selective schools doesn't seem like a well thought out plan. Also it is not necessary to go to one of those schools to become a physicist. More important than the school he attends for undergrad will be the school he attends for graduate studies.
 
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  • #5
berkeman said:
If your post is serious (I'm not sure about that yet), it looks like some of the "Specialized" high schools in the US require citizenship in the state where the school is located:

https://www.schools.nyc.gov/enrollment/enroll-grade-by-grade/specialized-high-schools

What did your brother score on the SHSAT? It also looks like a very high score on that test will be required...
No I am not joking about the school searching. I was joking about physicists: there is still a little chance for him to be like Zeldovich but not a chance to be like Landau or Einstein) No, my brother did not pass any tests. Is that SHSAT important to do now? We just did not think about that test-exam stuff.

Thank your reply and this info.
 
  • #6
gwnorth said:
What's wrong with Cambridge or Oxford? I doubt they would be any harder to get into than Caltech or MIT especially as an international applicant. Sending him to high school in the US on the minute chance of getting into one of those highly highly selective schools doesn't seem like a well thought out plan. Also it is not necessary to go to one of those schools to become a physicist. More important than the school he attends for undergrad will be the school he attends for graduate studies.
I think that US education is the best for physics and my brother is more comfortable to study in the US because he decided to move there with his mom. Oxford is not so good for Physics as Cambridge and Cambridge is worse than MIT and Caltech is the best.
 
  • #7
The fact that you are ranking some of the world's best schools as to which is preferable leads me to believe you don't have a grasp as to how incredibly difficult it is to get admitted to those schools. If your brother is going to be moving to the U.S. then it makes sense that he will attend high school there. If you want more information about potential schools you might try College Confidential - https://www.collegeconfidential.com/.

BTW most rankings put MIT on top but it really doesn't matter because the chances of being admitted are infinitesimal.
 
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  • #8
gwnorth said:
The fact that you are ranking some of the world's best schools as to which is preferable leads me to believe you don't have a grasp as to how incredibly difficult it is to get admitted to those schools. If your brother is going to be moving to the U.S. then it makes sense that he will attend high school there. If you want more information about potential schools you might try College Confidential - https://www.collegeconfidential.com/.

BTW most rankings put MIT on top but it really doesn't matter because the chances of being admitted are infinitesimal.
Yeah I see, thank you for the usefull website!
To be honest, Oxford is not the case because it is world leading in humanities but not the best in physics and mathematics. Of course Oxford is cool university and I respect it but I i just want to focus on and to do the best.
 
  • #9
So to be clear really we're talking about you and not your brother...
 
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  • #10
gwnorth said:
So to be clear really we're talking about you and not your brother...
Lol, no sorry, that's really about my younger brother. Unfortunately, I am too old for that stuff.
 
  • #11
Jirnyak said:
Of course Oxford is cool university and I respect it but I i just want to focus on and to do the best.
I would hope that you think so, since you've said previously that you went there for your degree...
Jirnyak said:
I am 25 and I have graduated from Oxford university in Chemical Biology but strongly believe that I want to do Physics all my future life. I did my Masters by research on the department of Chemistry and I was co-supervised by Professor in Organic Chemistry and Professor in Physical Chemistry. So that's why I fell in love into Physics. I was doing a lot of NMR and quantum mechanics and started to like Maths which I hated before.
 
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  • #12
I also question how serious this is, but:

1. The quality of high school makes little difference. What matters more is how well your brother takes advantage of the opportunities that he has.
2. What will matter is US citizenship or, failing that, permanent residence status. He should be working towards that immediately.
 
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  • #13
Vanadium 50 said:
I also question how serious this is, but:

1. The quality of high school makes little difference. What matters more is how well your brother takes advantage of the opportunities that he has.
2. What will matter is US citizenship or, failing that, permanent residence status. He should be working towards that immediately.
Thank you for the important comment.

Could you please describe and give more advice about taking advantage of the opportunities?
Do you mean doing electronics and mechanics hobby or going for special courses and societies? Should I search for a special physics tutor for him or this is enough for me to teach him some stuff I think is important (for example, I recently told him about Pascal triangel and binomial coefficient so now he can do exponents of sums, I found that no one in his class do not know that!)
 
  • #14
Jirnyak said:
I recently told him about Pascal triangel and binomial coefficient so now he can do exponents of sums, I found that no one in his class do not know that!
Sorry, that sentence parses as "my brother was the last in his class to learn that". Is that what you intended to say?
 
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  • #15
berkeman said:
Sorry, that sentence parses as "my brother was the last in his class to learn that". Is that what you intended to say?
Ah, sorry, no, I meant that they do not cover this at school, at least at his grade, and other students do not know that.
 
  • #16
Jirnyak said:
Could you please describe and give more advice about taking advantage of the opportunities?
Do you mean doing electronics and mechanics hobby or going for special courses and societies?
I would think that at his level, doing inspired science fair projects and research would be one of the best things that he (and you) could pursue. In the US, the Intel science fair competition is a wonderful and impressive affair:

https://newsroom.intel.com/press-kits/2019-isef/#gs.u2x1h0

I don't know if there is an equivalent affair in the UK or EU, but I'm guessing that there should be something similar.
 
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  • #17
berkeman said:
Sorry, that sentence parses as "my brother was the last in his class to learn that". Is that what you intended to say?

I want to teach him differentiation and integration because it would be very usefull push for his physics knowledge. I am telling him now about sequences and preparing to study limits for differentiation.
 
  • #18
berkeman said:
I would think that at his level, doing inspired science fair projects and research would be one of the best things that he (and you) could pursue. In the US, the Intel science fair competition is a wonderful and impressive affair:

https://newsroom.intel.com/press-kits/2019-isef/#gs.u2x1h0

I don't know if there is an equivalent affair in the UK or EU, but I'm guessing that there should be something similar.

This sounds cool and I did not now and think about that and in that way.

Thanks a lot for this!
 
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  • #19
Jirnyak said:
I want to teach him differentiation and integration because it would be very usefull push for his physics knowledge. I am telling him now about sequence and preparing to study limits for differentiation.
As a medic, I need to ask you an honest question. How does your brother feel about all of this "help" from you? Do you think he might feel a bit pressured? How do your parents feel about all of this?
 
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  • #20
berkeman said:
As a medic, I need to ask you an honest question. How does your brother feel about all of this "help" from you? Do you think he might feel a bit pressured? How do your parents feel about all of this?
Honestly, he does not like maths and physics and prefer playing video games on his own. But if we start a lesson he is happy for knowing new interesting things. For example, he was really exited with Pascal triangle, I think that was like a wonderfull discovery for him and he even says that he likes "this sort of maths". Please do not think I am violently doing maths with him, I am just telling him not boring and interesting things I am also exited about.

Of course, my mom is happy if we are doing lessons.
 
  • #21
Jirnyak said:
And of course he will apply to Caltech and MIT because he wants to do physics his whole life.

Jirnyak said:
To be honest, Oxford is not the case because it is world leading in humanities but not the best in physics and mathematics. Of course Oxford is cool university and I respect it but I i just want to focus on and to do the best.

There's nothing wrong with wanting to go to Caltech or MIT, but one should be aware that there is no generally "top" school in physics or mathematics. There are many good places in the world. For example, Andrew Wiles is currently Regius Professor at Oxford http://www.ox.ac.uk/news/2018-05-31...ted-first-regius-professor-mathematics-oxford. And while the experimental work for this year's Wolf Prize was done at MIT, the theoretical work was done by Bistritzer and MacDonald at UT Austin http://nanoscale.blogspot.com/2020/01/the-wolf-prize-and-how-condensed-matter.html. Also, I don't think Zeldovich or Ginzburg went to Caltech or MIT.
 
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  • #22
@jirnyak said:
Honestly, he does not like maths and physics and prefer playing video games on his own.
I'm sorry but this does not seem to mesh with
He is determined to become a theoretical physicist like Zeldovich or Ginzburg
What this really seems like is that this is your dream for him.

In any case one of things you need to realize with regards to admission to most "top" colleges in the U.S. is that they are holistic (though MIT is less so). This means it's not just about grades. Yes he will need top scores in high school and on the standardized tests (SAT or ACT) but they are going to be looking for more than this.

He will need "most rigorous courses" designation on his transcript as indicated by the guidance counsellor which usually will require him to have taken a number of AP courses, counsellor or teacher letters of recommendation, meaningful extra curricular activities, compelling essays (one about himself and one about why he wants to attend x school) and possibly an interview.

The application process is very lengthy and time consuming and many students start crafting their essays the summer before senior year. They also usually take the standardized tests at least twice after extensive prep (sometimes on their own but more and more through a test prep company) so time for that needs to be factored into the planning process. It's not like applying to university in the U.K.
 
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  • #23
Have we heard from the individual yet, or just his sibling who with the family thinks that the child is the next Einstein. This thread is confusing.
 
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  • #24
Jirnyak said:
I think that US education is the best for physics and my brother is more comfortable to study in the US because he decided to move there with his mom. Oxford is not so good for Physics as Cambridge and Cambridge is worse than MIT and Caltech is the best.

This is one of the most ridiculous thing I've heard on this forum. The level of ignorance here is unbelievable.

Zz.
 
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  • #25
Jirnyak said:
Honestly, he does not like maths and physics and prefer playing video games on his own.

Maybe the first thing he needs to do is step away from the games and get interested in doing something else.
 
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  • #26
Jirnyak said:
Yeah I see, thank you for the usefull website!
To be honest, Oxford is not the case because it is world leading in humanities but not the best in physics and mathematics. Of course Oxford is cool university and I respect it but I i just want to focus on and to do the best.

According to this league table for universities in the UK, St Andrews is top for Physics & Astronomy (!?). Oxford and Cambridge are 2nd and 3rd respectively.

https://www.thecompleteuniversityguide.co.uk/league-tables/rankings/physics-and-astronomy
 
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  • #27
ZapperZ said:
This is one of the most ridiculous thing I've heard on this forum. The level of ignorance here is unbelievable.

Perhaps it would have been more constructive to explain why you believe his view is erroneous.
 
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  • #28
@PeroK said:
According to this league table for universities in the UK, St Andrews is top for Physics & Astronomy (!?). Oxford and Cambridge are 2nd and 3rd respectively.

And remember, regardless of what rankings system you look at, they are in essence ranking the university on the quality of their graduate programs and research output. A top school for graduate studies may not be the best choice for undergraduate studies. For undergrad "fit" is far more important than prestige. A student at a school that is not a good fit (for whatever reasons), regardless of it's level of prestige, may end up performing more poorly than they would have at a school where they felt more comfortable.
 
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  • #29
gwnorth said:
And remember, regardless of what rankings system you look at, they are in essence ranking the university on the quality of their graduate programs and research output. A top school for graduate studies may not be the best choice for undergraduate studies. For undergrad "fit" is far more important than prestige. A student at a school that is not a good fit (for whatever reasons), regardless of it's level of prestige, may end up performing more poorly than they would have at a school where they felt more comfortable.

If you'd taken the trouble to look at the link I posted, you would see that it is not an assessment of research programmes. It's mostly based on undergraduate courses.

The only point in my posting was to make the point that Oxford does not specialise in "humanities".

As I'm not the one interested in sending my younger brother to an elite high school then top university in the US, I'm not sure why you are preaching to me!
 
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  • #30
@PeroK I wasn't preaching to you. I was expanding on your posting for the benefit of the OP.
 
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  • #31
gwnorth said:
@PeroK I wasn't preaching to you. I was expanding on your posting for the benefit of the OP.

Okay, sorry. I misunderstood.
 
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  • #32
Jirnyak said:
Yeah I see, thank you for the usefull website!
To be honest, Oxford is not the case because it is world leading in humanities but not the best in physics and mathematics. Of course Oxford is cool university and I respect it but I i just want to focus on and to do the best.

This is categorically false hahaha look at oxford's theoretical physics group in the physics dept.

https://www2.physics.ox.ac.uk/research/rudolf-peierls-centre-for-theoretical-physics and the

and their theoretical physics group in the math dept.

https://www.maths.ox.ac.uk/groups/mathematical-physics/members

They are full of amazing researchers... in particular the latter link... those are HUGE names! tons of old genius and young up-and-comers
 
  • #33
Jirnyak said:
Dear everyone,

My younger brother who is 15 years old and me, both live in the UK. He is determined to become a theoretical physicist like Zeldovich or Ginzburg.
We have an opportunity to send him to a US high school because it is the best place to become and be a physicist.
Could you please suggest good (potentially the best) physical and mathematical high schools in the US to start becoming a physicist?
And of course he will apply to Caltech and MIT because he wants to do physics his whole life.

Thank you for your attention,

My brother and me)
Are you looking for private schools or public? The best are some of the private academies. If you want a public option, then one of tbe specialized science and math magnet programs is your best bet.
However, some require admission via test.
 
  • #34
This thread is nearly two years old.

According to the OP's profile, he was "last seen" on PF in November 2020.
 

1. What are the top high schools in the US for aspiring theoretical physicists?

Some of the top high schools in the US for aspiring theoretical physicists include Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology, Bronx High School of Science, and Stuyvesant High School.

2. How can I determine if a high school has a strong physics program?

One way to determine if a high school has a strong physics program is to research the school's course offerings and see if they offer advanced classes in physics, such as AP or IB courses. You can also look at the school's extracurricular activities, such as physics clubs or science fairs, to see if they have a strong focus on physics.

3. Are there any specific criteria I should look for when choosing a high school for theoretical physics?

Some criteria to consider when choosing a high school for theoretical physics include the school's reputation for science and math education, the availability of advanced physics courses, and the opportunity for hands-on research or internships in the field of physics.

4. How important is the location of the high school for pursuing a career in theoretical physics?

The location of the high school may not be as important as the quality of the school's physics program. However, it may be beneficial to attend a high school in a larger city or near a university with a strong physics department, as this can provide more opportunities for research and networking in the field.

5. Can I still pursue a career in theoretical physics if I don't attend a top high school?

Yes, attending a top high school is not a requirement for pursuing a career in theoretical physics. What matters most is your dedication to learning and pursuing opportunities to develop your skills and knowledge in the field. With hard work and determination, you can achieve your goals in theoretical physics regardless of the high school you attend.

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