Typical asian student chance me

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:After reading today's "disappointment" post, how would you chance the applicant in this post?


Top 50ish, which is a great outcome.
Anonymous
Chicago summer program, then apply ED0 to U Chicago. If that doesn’t work, ED1 Emory.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Rejected from all of the schools you mentioned. Yes, all of them. The public ones, the private ones, even the two LACs you mentioned. Rejected at all.


Yup. College Applying While Asian.
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Anonymous wrote:SAT score between 1520 and 1560, a GPA above 3.975, 7–8 AP exams all scored 5, with some involvement in sports and music, some community service, and some research/paper work.


Forget top 30 colleges and focus on lower ranking privates or state schools.


lol?
what?
yeah, no. my asian kid is at an ivy with lower stats.


Lucky one, your kid must be an outlier.

My kid with much strong stats, 1590,13APs, multiple leaderships, numerous state awards, national award but not top, volunteer award plus law firm part-time job, rejected by all Ivies applied , bottom ones didn't apply.
End up in top lac.


Nope - just private HS.
Non-stem and non-stereotypical so really stood out.


My kid is also Non-stem and non-stereotypical, what make your DC stood out? ranked at the top?


Uncommon ECs, interests and jobs - followed a true internal interest/drive. We (parents) know nothing about this area and couldn’t have helped even if we wanted to.

Give your kid the space and time to find what they’d do/study/learn if no one else was there. Then have them do that, even if it seems strange.


Tiger parents mentality: if the kid’s interest is not math/engineering related, they are going to freak out.


Because those parents were in math/engineering majors, don't think liberal art majors can make decent money for living. Understandable as first generation immigrants.

Not at all. Plenty of first gen college students major in business, finance, accounting, prelaw... any major where jobs are plentiful and pays well.


Outside of business, most of these are not majors at selective private schools. They are mostly vocational state Flagship majors.

? selective privates don't have prelaw type majors?

As to your "vocational" school comment, that's very 1950s thinking, grandma/grandpa.


Np.
Nope, pre let’s go over here law is not a major. Neither is premed. It is a track. People who pursue law school typically major in humanities or social sciences or frankly anything… Same for premed.

Accounting is absolutely a vocational major. Very 1st gen minded of you.


Agree. There was a time vocational school was called just that. Now it's conflated into 'college'. As anyone can see from the NYC subway ads, one can get a 2 year college degree in Medical Insurance and Billing.
Anonymous
What does being Asian have to do with chances?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Op here. Southern California suburb.


What major? UC does not discriminate against Asian kids but regardless of race some majors are extremely difficult to get into for anyone. Is 3.9 unweighted or weighted?


3.9 unweighted will get you waitlisted at mid tier UCs. You might get into UCSC. You should be in the 9% and get into Merced. You should be able to get into your local Cal State unless it’s SDSU or CSLB and you want engineering, CS or Econ.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Op here. Southern California suburb.


What major? UC does not discriminate against Asian kids but regardless of race some majors are extremely difficult to get into for anyone. Is 3.9 unweighted or weighted?


They still discriminate against Asians just not overtly.

Some top Universities are doing the same thing with DEI by continuing on with just different names and titles.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:SAT score between 1520 and 1560, a GPA above 3.975, 7–8 AP exams all scored 5, with some involvement in sports and music, some community service, and some research/paper work.


I would look closely into the activities. Perhaps applying to Education as a major? A narrative may be made from his community services if they are education related.

His gpa does not stand out in today’s grade inflated world, 20% or at least 15% kids are straight A students. Test score crossed the threshold. Unless from a rural area Midwest, or inner city Newark NJ, 7 APs are not going to impress AOs.
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