This Long Island high school obtains the qualification when it comes to amazing statistics from brothers.
Bethpage, from Plainview, John F. Kennedy High School has 15 twin sets in the graduated class of 447 elderly this year.
The large number of twins at the Plainview School also includes two pairs of brothers with identical names: Rebecca and Josh.
The school ties of adolescents have been strong since the grammar school.
“The majority, if not everyone, has a leg in the district from the kindergarten,” said Timothy Lamb, deputy director of the school, to Today.
Grateful, the 30 students are fraternal twins, so their teachers do not have to add to their workload to determine who it is.
“Some teachers do not know the same twins, only although some look like,” Lamb continued.
When they were babies, their parents have just formed their own support group, which with months and had a biannual garage sale of the hands.
“Many with babies because the parents joined a ‘parents of the twin group. All are very friendly to each other. Everyone is close. It’s as if they had a small clique,” Lamb added.
Meredith Brake, the mother of the twins Emily, attending the University of Georgia in the fall, and Amanda, in the state of Ohio, praised the group of twins for their unique camaraderie.
“It was a great place to know that you are alone on this trip,” he told The Outlet.
School statistics is impressive taking into account that twins occur in about 3% of all births, according to the US disease control and prevention centers. UU.
Some of their twins have one leg in some of the same classes, such as Liam and Emma Heaney.
“We don’t really talk in class,” Emma told The Outlet.
“Because we talk a lot out of class,” Liam added.
Chloe and Aidan Manzo will even go to the same University, the University of Florida.
Having his twin Ben on the side of both emotional and academic help, Sydney Monka said today.
“It means knowing that I never have to enter anything alone and I always have a personal mathematics tutor.”