A 1550 scorer will be in the minority at Johns Hopkins. But still, your point remains that OP sounds like their child might be hovering around the top 10% of a second tier private with a 1550 and 4.0 uw max rigor. But with deficient EC's they're looking at UVA as a reach with VaTech as a target. If business is the major, look at early decision to BC, Villanova, Northeastern, Michigan, NYU, USC. ED plus a high SAT is a big selling point for these schools. NYU Stern and Michigan Ross are reaches but if studying economics, they have a chance. Other schools to consider are Penn State, UMass, UConn, Rutgers, etc. They all have reputable business schools and those stats should get some merit aid. |
Cornell ILR has a 25-30% (or so) ED admit rate? Might be higher. But you really need work experience with human capital/labor. If you get that this summer, I highly encourage it. https://www.ilr.cornell.edu/programs/undergraduate-admissions/academics |
Ummmmm no! Don't listen to this. Your DC can do far, far better than VT, Rochester, Syracuse, Delaware. Crazy talk. |
Agree |
Yeah, you should have an idea looking into T15% in your school in previous years. With the Stats , full pay and from a private, T20 should not be a problem, only wild card is your major and ethnic. |
| If OP wants an easier process, consider ED Boston College Carroll. It’s not a T30, but student outcomes are decent. |
To add, the other half still got into T30. |
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Comment for OP:
We haven’t used him yet but consider paying for the “junior application review” with Dr Hoffman - he’s been discussed here. Former AO with Vanderbilt and Swarthmore. He might have great feedback on major choice and positioning, esp vis-a-vis Vanderbilt. |
| There hasn’t been any worthwhile advice in this thread since page 5. Too many posters with no experience with private school matriculation. |
This is not correct. My kid is at a top private in another city which grades on a 100 scale. Median grade is probably a 92. Top kids have a weighted grades above 100. We have a limited number of AP classes. Twenty percent of class to Ivies/ Stanford /Mit. Another 30 percent to T30 colleagues and T10 slacs. |
ILR is basically a prelaw track at Cornell. Why would OP be interested in ILR? Hotel seems to be the obvious choice if the intended major is econ/finance/business. |
| Shouldn't the $60k a year you are paying let you speak with the counselor your tuition supports? |
I doubt their school is that expensive. OP: What is the average SAT of your kid’s school? We can gauge how good the school is. |
Would you mind sharing the name of your independent counselor? We are looking for one for our daughter who's rising Junior. |
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It sounds as if the son is a wonderful, self-motivated student who will outperform the super-packaged students.
Maybe he’d have a decent (15%) chance even at Penn, Princeton and Yale. I think the logical strategy, if he’s more intellectual, is to ED 1 and 2 at schools in the Emory/Rice/Tufts/WashU class or the Bates/Colby/Reed class; RD at three dream schools; apply to a true financial safety; then fill out the rest of the list with less-selective private schools, like Fordham or maybe Oberlin, that need full-pay students. If he wants tailgate parties, he could replace the Emory-tier schools with schools like USC and Tulane, and make schools like Syracuse and the University of Miami the slot-fillers. He should make a school like JMU that’s sure to give him great aid a financial safety, but, otherwise, for the slot-filler schools, he should focus on need-aware schools. |