I don’t know. How many of 11 Whitman students admitted were legacies? |
Here you go: https://moco360.media/2023/09/13/where-montgomery-county-high-school-graduates-are-going-to-college/ |
This was the situation before the recent price increases, and will continue to be. I don’t know about losing the plot, but part of the equation is how you communicate about the pressures and stresses of the current system to your kids. For us, I figure the camps, school tuition, etc., are worth it if our kids enjoy the activities/camps/schools, and are receiving benefits from participating. The rest is just noise. I went from public schools to Ivy but the reality is that admissions are so insane these days that you can’t expect it for your kids. People can spend all you want on top privates but the kids are not getting into an Ivy or similar unless they’re truly excellent and put in the effort themselves. In any event, Ivy admission is not the be all and end all and we do our best to avoid putting that pressure on our kids |
DP here. I would bet 50% of the Whitman Ivy admits are legacy and 75% at Sidwell. Or some years it's 75% at Whitman and 90% Sidwell. Point being, it's the percentage of Ivy admits at Whitman is lower than Sidwell but still high. |
| Ivy grad here: i’m not so keen on sending my own kids to Ivy; have you seen the protests and crazinees?; also my most ambitious and succcessful friends did not go to ivies; rather most of my ivy friends stopped working when they married, are complaining about how hard their life is as SAHM with 2 nannies and —- i don’t know —- its just not the be all end all to go to an ivy. The kids at some of the state schools may be more ambitious! |
I’m sure some (many?) prefer this life to a life of grinding it out for “ambition”, and if the private school route is their ticket to this outcome it is well worth it lol |
Such a great point! I mean, Whitman students, living in one of the most affluent school districts around, can't possibly be Ivy legacies too. |
Good Morning W(oeful) grad/parent! 1. Instagram (Sidwell c/o 2023). Look it up. 83% of the graduating seniors posted, and based on Instagram posts alone 17/125 (13.6%) are Ivies. I personally know 4 students from that class who didn’t post. They are currently freshman at Ivies this year (21/125=16.8%). Btw, there were several 2023 Sidwell grads who were admitted to more than one Ivy that year, so the overall Ivy admissions rate is much higher than 16.8% (and MUCH higher than 3.5%). 2. You don’t understand percentages or college admissions policies. Private colleges can select as many students from a particular high school as they want. There are a couple of NYC privates that consistently send 20-35% of their graduates to Ivies (and they’re the same size as Sidwell). Unlike you, I’m not going to try to make excuses. Those colleges clearly prefer those NYC privates for whatever reason. |
Which Washington DC area private sends the most kids the Ivys (you can exclude Cornell)? |
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If you were to adjust downward for inflation, is the current tuition similar- adjusted for inflation - to the tuition in the 1980s/90s? Or even if you consider the overall inflation is it still much more expensive? In other words is becoming more and more expensive? |
You tried but this PP proves the old adage that you can put lipstick on a pig (or admit obnoxious parents to an expensive school)but it’s still a pig. |
No, tuition increases have outpaced inflation throughout that time. |
The increases feel outrageously excessive. |
Why would you want to exclude Cornell? That’s not nice. To answer your question, it varies from year to year. Last year, it was probably Sidwell. It’s too early to tell for 2024, but GDS and Sidwell are doing very well. So far, GDS is slightly ahead of Sidwell (11 vs 9), but about 11 more GDS students have posted than Sidwell. |
NCS cost $10k in 1990. In 2024, that $10k is worth $23,469.47. But they all are bastions of inclusivity and equity. |