If your family is looking at the Academies of Loudoun, the hard part is rarely interest. Loudoun has many students who like science, math, engineering, technology, health, research, design, or hands-on problem solving. The hard part is knowing what matters now, what can wait, and how to prepare without turning the admissions season into noise.
This guide focuses on tech logic ACL in plain language. It is written for families who want useful direction, not rumor, panic, or generic test-prep advice.
What the official information says
Insight Assessment describes tech logic as identifying logical structures and organizational plans in written text, diagrams, data files, and mathematical functions. It is broader than coding, even though students interested in computer science may recognize parts of it.
The important takeaway is that families should work from the current LCPS admissions page, not from old screenshots or neighborhood summaries. Dates, session details, and eligibility notes can change by cycle. The skill demands, however, are stable enough to plan around: students need strong reasoning, clear writing, and a calm understanding of the process.
What this means for your family
Tech logic is about systems. What rule controls the output? What condition changes the path? What information is irrelevant? What sequence must happen first? Students who like coding may have an advantage, but only if they slow down enough to read the exact rule.
For most families, this is where preparation becomes more personal. Two students can have the same grades and need completely different support. One may lose time because they overcalculate. Another may solve accurately but explain poorly. Another may have strong ideas but produce writing that is too general for a timed response. A good plan starts with the actual student in front of you.
How to prepare without overbuilding
Preparation should include tables, flowcharts, if-then conditions, and small systems with constraints. Students should practice translating words into rules and then testing the rules against cases.
Keep prep connected to evidence. If the student misses a STEM problem, identify the reason. If a writing response feels weak, name the specific weakness. If timing falls apart, find the moment where time was lost. Families do not need a larger pile of work as much as they need a sharper feedback loop.
Common mistake to avoid
The mistake is assuming tech logic is only for AET IT applicants. AOS and AET applicants take the same STEM assessment in the fall cycle, and logic is part of strong STEM reasoning across programs.
The better move is to simplify. Decide what the next two weeks should improve, then choose practice that fits that target. This keeps students from confusing busyness with readiness.
A simple next step
Ask your student to rewrite one logic problem as numbered rules. If they cannot state the rules clearly, they are not ready to solve efficiently.
If your student needs structure but has a crowded schedule, the self-paced ACL prep course is the cleanest next step. It gives families a way to practice STEM reasoning and writing without adding another weekly commute.
Explore the Self-Paced ACL Prep Course
Source note
This article was prepared using the LCPS Academies of Loudoun Admissions and Outreach page, the official ACL school page, the LCPS Program of Studies, the Insight Assessment STEM Thinking Skills Test page, and AcademiesPrep program pages. AcademiesPrep by EduAvenues is independent and is not endorsed or sponsored by the Academies of Loudoun or Loudoun County Public Schools.