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About 70,000 kids are named Eagle Scouts each year in the US.
It's not exactly an extraordinary accomplishment. |
Well in this case it's 70K. Not exactly like being among the 100 high schoolers that will enter the MLB draft (or the 10 who go to the Olympics for track and field), etc, etc. |
| Yes this is a thing |
| It might be a thing, but it won’t help your child get into an elite school. |
| I guess people justify try everything and see what works when its time to apply for colleges.. |
How can you be so sure? If its a thing and people are doing it for that purpose then how can you say that? |
It’s just over 60k, which represents about 6% of kids who started Boy Scouts. I’m first pp and would also like OP to know that once you have a 14/15/16 yo you will not be able to compel them to do anything against their will. Maybe they will like the hiking, biking, camping, scouting and maybe the won’t by that time. |
| Not new, and can always be trotted out. Like my uncle, every conversation about cousin's drug addiction includes, but he made eagle. |
| ^^ first person in thread saying it’s not a thing |
This is it, 100%. I couldn't force my 14-17 year old to do extracurriculars against his will. He had zero interest (less than zero actually) in Scouts beyond the Cub Scout years. My husband (former Eagle Scout) was dismayed for about a day but our son quickly developed interests an passions of his own. |
ok, people, stop teasing OP. No, OP, it's not a guarantee. It might help later in life for an internship, but not in college admissions. DS is an Eagle Scout, now in college. It didn't help DS get into his top 2 choices, but then again, he is a CS major. But, being an Eagle Scout can be like being in a fraternity in that when another Eagle Scout sees your resume with Eagle Scout on it, they may put that resume in the "follow up" pile, rather than the discard pile. |
| Ivy and Eagle Scout shouldn’t be in the same sentence. You’re applying to college, not the Salvation Army. Get creative and pursue something you actually care about. Make your own opportunities outside of an organization with cookie-cutter achievement ranks. Do you really think Harvard cares if you know how to tie a slip knot? Or if you’ve tied it a hundred or a thousand times? How obnoxiously trite and boring. |
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Colleges like to see actual interest and commitment to activities.
If your son has a genuine interest in Cub Scouts, her advice isn't so bad. If he isn't so interested in joining Cub Scouts now, don't force him just for the future college applications. Help him find an activity he is interested in and he will be committed to. What you don't want to do is not really join anything or go from actvity to activity and not really be committed to any one activity. You don't want him to join a whole bunch of activities his junior year of high school because he thinks it will look good on his college applications. |
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There are 1900 freshmen at Harvard and this includes all the athletes, minorities, VIPs, etc.
There are 70,000 Eagle Scouts. Do the math. The admission rate for these Eagle Scouts is no better than the average admission rate to Harvard. |
Forgot to add, that being said - he's in 4th grade. He's young enough to try certain activities at this point. |