| While it sort of helps to look at the lowest ranked schools on the list to figure out where the bottom is, it does not mean that's where you kid will go or that none of those kids got into higher ranked schools that they didn't like as much, that didn't offer enough money, or that they rejected for some other reason. Your counselor will know more. I can think of six kids who did not choose the highest ranked school they got into for a variety of good reasons. So listen to your college counselor and don't make assumptions based on a given class' list of matriculations. You just never really know what went into each decision. |
+1 |
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Your school should give you access to Naviance or Scoir that has a scattergram that shows by college, where prior year classes from your school have been accepted, waitlisted, denied by GPA/test score and where your child fits into the graph. We found this very helpful to start a list.
It does not show EC's, etc., but at least is a starting point of consideration. Make sure you look at recent years--pre-pandemic/pre-test optional data is almost meaningless now. |
private or public university?
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| It depends partly on what DC’s school indicates is the median or mean GPA for that class and whether they use a 4.0 scale (typical for privates). Local publics have a 5.0 GPA scale, so their GPA numbers will not be directly comparable and quality college admissions offices know that. It also depends on what strengths weaknesses show up in the grades. Someone weak in math but strong in history/english might be fine at a LAC which is not STEM focused. |
Only MD publics seem to a have a 5.0 scale. Not FCPS. |
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This is such a Northeast corridor problem. Get past regional bias & you will see plenty of pretty, interesting, lively colleges at which you can recover from a lackluster high school GPA & springboard into a solid career. For example, the U. of Kansas accepts over 90% of applicants.
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Which top 40 school? |
Which school? |
Ah, the well known Top 28. Calling it a Top 30 would have downgraded it too much … |
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gpas aren't comparable between public school that gives weighting for honors and AP and competitive privates that don't weight at all.
I think schools have their own formula to recalculate gpas for each student during the admission process. |
These are great schools! Nothing not to be proud of. |
All are decent schools but Oberlin and Smith are more competitive and don't belong on this list |
A great education is never a waste of money. |
NYU? |