| Swarthmore, Middlebury, Tufts, Davidson, Vandy, Pomona, etc. |
Camp Trin-Trin is pretty easy to get into from ANYWHERE, if you're paying full freight. |
| Yeah- Trinity takes anyone. Michigan, not so much. Not sure when people will realize the true selectiveness/quality of top tier public schools, ESPECIALLY for out of state |
| Michigan takes six or seven kids from Sidwell every year. This is the 3.5 GPA and above crowd. Michigan knows what it is getting - excellent students who don't need support and can thrive at a great school. |
| I'm sorry I mean to say this is NOT the 3.5 gpa and above crowd |
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Seriously, what is the deal or care where these kids go to college. Can these kids not just pick a few schools they like and thrive there. THEN go to a big name school for their masters which is much more important than the bachelors anyway.
We are at a top 5 school and I just don't really care. We aren't in a private school in the hopes she gets to a better name college to brag about. It does not define you, your child or your family name. And if you think it does, well than we aren't people you want to hang with anyway. |
The kids I know who have gotten in/attended have been certainly near 3.5 and usually with very strong scores. |
| What about Washington & Lee? Wake Forest? |
Please.... |
I don't think so. I also disagree with Notre Dame, unless the student has phenomenal extracurriculars - like founded a charity or is an Olympic athlete. |
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Anonymous wrote:
Swarthmore, Middlebury, Tufts, Davidson, Vandy, Pomona, etc. I don't think so. I also disagree with Notre Dame, unless the student has phenomenal extracurriculars - like founded a charity or is an Olympic athlete. Yup. a 3.5 is an indication of a very smart, hard working kid |
+1 !! |
A 3.5 at Sidwell/STA/NCS/GDS/Holton, where you max at at 4.0 and the grades are unweighted even for APs, is an excellent GPA that will get the child into at least a few of these schools (and Michigan, UNC Chapel Hill, Vassar, UVA, etc.). A 3.5 kid at these top schools STILL HAS A GPA THAT REFLECTS AN "A-" AVERAGE. If you have kids at these top schools, they are not handing out As. So to average an A- for 4 years put you in the top 15-25% I would say. NCS and STA send about 1/4- 1/3 of their graduating class to ivies alone in any given year... |
Remember, we're talking about Sidwell, St. Alban's, etc, with hard grading policies and a rigorous curriculum. They're not suburban grade inflation factories that turbocharge GPAs for taking AP courses. Most college admission staffs know that. |
| I'd imagine a 3.5 Sidwell student might easily be carrying a 2100 SAT. In those circumstances, I wouldn't worry. |