I will take the risk. |
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Middlebury - 17.5% acceptance Bates: 24.17 % Bowdoin: 14.95 Haverford: 23.49% Coast Guard Academy: 16.47% they accept roughly 300 a year George Washington: 34.39% (Washington Latin has had two consecutive years of full merit scholarships awards : http://washington.cbslocal.com/2015/03/18/d-c-students-awarded-full-scholarships-to-george-washington-university/) Colby: 26.04 Georgetown: 17.08% William and Mary: 33% Wesleyan University: 20. |
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OP-you may want to consider a lot of recent research like the below. Any child with the raw material to get to an IVY will get there from Latin, Wilson or Walls, I dare say a private school may make it a little more difficult, but I subscribe to the big fish, small pond theory where a school like Latin (tiny) maximizes chances if you have the chops. A child has gone to Brown and there will be Ivies to follow. I do know kids at Latin - even those who sadly, fatally, don't make it into Harvard or MIT -- also enjoy the heck out of HS at the same time. For me, engagement with learning, a great teacher and peer group and responsive administration meant more than ANYTHING while raising our child in the teen years.
"But American youth, especially teens, are not in good emotional shape. They feel mostly “bored and checked out” at school, according to adolescence scholar Larry Steinberg. Academically, they are underachieving when compared to youth in other developed nations. And their mental health is declining. During the school year, their stress has edged beyond that of adults, according to a survey of the American Psychological Association last year. They rank in the bottom quarter among other developed nations on measures of well-being, life-satisfaction, and relationship quality, according to a recent UNICEF study. " http://time.com/3774596/american-teens-emotions/ |
| Exactly!! I am not a Latin parent or student - but I'd hazard a guess that those students in small classes with caring teachers are reaching further and doing better on AVERAGE than their compatriots at both privates and publics- and one should include the poor children at the other schools that because of stress or pressure or otherwise, succumb to drugs, depression and suicide, not to mention gangs, pregnancy and drop outs. I think that the small classes and atmosphere at Latin may do a lot to alleviate that for kids both from upper Socioeconomic classes and lower. |
That's just silly. With classes this small, there can be a real difference from one year to another in academic achievement. It would be interesting to look year to year to see if there are trends developing, but one year alone tells you very little. Methinks your higher education did not include much training in stats. |
This is all BS and speculation. You have no idea if it is true or not. |
| Hence pp said "I'd hazard a guess". Pp is right - Latin kids are very plugged in. Now go take your angry pills. |
Because other than Latin and Basis, where is a white person in PP's demographic supposed to go if they don't want Walls/private/move? |
DCI. |
I'd say many. I was doing all those things before I left for college, so there wasn't much of a change at all. Why isn't your teen doing these things? |
What's DCI's college acceptance look like? |
PP, just curious: How old were you at your freshman year in college? Did you go away from home and if so, did Mummy go with you to help out, every step of the way? |
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I suspect that you are going to start seeing much better colleges on the list in the next couple of years. These are the classes where more and more kids stayed between middle and high school. My high schooler loves school, loves learning and enjoys being in a small environment where he knows all of his teachers. He has expressed wanting the same for college, so even if he gets in to any ivy, he would probably turn it down for something that will bring out his strengths (and knowing what those are at this age is pretty amazing and a testement to a great education).
We are proud to send our kid to a school where nearly every kid goes to college despite the fact that for many they are the first in their families to do so. If we had wanted a conventionally good school where there was a guarantee of a good college in the future we would have moved to Montgomery County years ago. |
+1 signed, whats wrong with AU, Oberlin, GW? |
Thank you! |