| 1500 is also not very high for T10. |
| I live inside the beltway, but not in the same bubble as you. My senior and friends are headed off to great places, but not “top 20” nor were those the goal. I think my kid’s public university is in the 60s or 70s in US news but really don’t care. |
|
The school talk here is insane. Is it like that everywhere or is it just DC/Nova parents driving that train?
Also my DS got into UVA with As and Bs. |
|
This sounds so promising , thank you What years and how many and what classes did he get a b in (I’m assuming final transcript ) ? Also what school in uva did he get in ? Test scores if any ?? |
I agree. Even if my kid had done all the rigor (APUSH/AP ENG/AP FL) they might still have not gotten in, but it would give a better chance. My kid consciously made the decision not to do those, JR year was done from home and they thought of their mental health (no issues but it was covid and they need more than 2 hours of sleep). As I stated, it all worked out, they got into all their targets and safeties and had many excellent choices to choose from. |
A lot of people here are truly horrible. |
However, the other side is it could easily have been the B- in Calculus. If it was the "rigor" and lack of APUSH/APENG/AP FL, then why wouldn't they just reject outright. Fact they wanted to see a LOCI and first semester grades indicates my kid had made them "competitive". It's a school that only Defers 100-120 kids typically and accepted ~1000-1100 for ED1. So it's not like some of the Ivies that defer 75%+ of ED/EA/whatever they call it |
Probably because two people can come to completely opposite conclusions when given the same facts. Your conclusion for BIL is that he didn't need any name schools because he worked hard and is successful. Perhaps his conclusion is that he had to work 2x as hard as everyone else at non-name schools just to get to the same place that kids that worked 50% less then him, but went to the "right" schools. I know a guy that dropped out of Indiana and started a successful Tech company...his verdict is that no way his kid is going to Indiana or anything that smells like Indiana, because he thought it was worthless. I don't know what schools he thinks are acceptable, but I would imagine they are all top names. |
I sat in on some zoom "info sessions" at top 20 schools (and high ranking liberal arts colleges). They tried not to say it but, in the end, you need to take the most rigorous classes and get As. Without some special circumstances, this is the reality at most of the brand name schools. |
Yes, kids are dropping down in rigor to maintain GPA at our high school. Colleges prefer 4.0 with some non AP classes rather than all AP’s and a bunch of B’s. |
But also the reality is that even with all As in the most rigorous classes, the very likely outcome is they still don't get into the T20 schools so why should that drive the HS choices. Lighten up on the rigor so you can enjoy your life, maybe you'll still get some Bs. And you'll likely end up at college with a lot of the kids who made themselves crazy in HS trying to meet that standard. |
| It's a messed up game they have to play, or they pay the price for it. My kids have switched if the teacher is not good, or a hard grader, even if they'd prefer the class theoretically. Having a C on transcript would have too much of an impact and create huge amounts of stress. |
It's his own bias based on his situation and great luck at being successful. The reality is most who graduate from Indiana will do better than drop outs. |
A C screws you for T30. |