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Agree. Each T20 college prefers a “type” of student. |
This was true at our HS |
This, above. Find the right college for the student's own, actual values and interests, rather than trying to assemble an application tailored to tell a college admissions office what you think it wants to hear. |
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Iykyk
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| Some people say all college admission visits are the same. I always wonder why they think that. Because to me, they often reflect the values of the school and give advice about what they are looking for. They are also telling you what makes them special/different. It was very helpful to us in looking for a good fit. |
| Yale values dedication to public service a lot! |
God damn it. |
Seriously. If your kid doesn’t want to read a stack of books, who would you want them to go to school with a crowd of people who like to read stacks of books? A miserable, lonely student is not getting their best grades, making lots of connections, participating as much in class, working closely with professors. Find a good fit. Look for a place where they are going to thrive. “My 30 year old son/daughter is rich/accomplished, miserable, bitter, and depressed” is not a flex. You both need to play the long game. |
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DC who is a freshman at VT/Engineering, noted, among many other things, the following to a HS-senior looking to apply there:
"Be sure to include volunteer experience, as community service is highly valued." |
Agree with the above. Vanderbilt values high standardized test scores & Georgetown values wealthy, full-pay students. |
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Yale: collaboration
Penn: leadership Stanford and Duke: pointy high national ranking/achievement (esp in sports) Northwestern: melding arts and STEM or editor of school paper Vanderbilt: class president Dartmouth: outdoors nature lovers who are kind |
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Can we get more summaries like this?
What is Duke or Cornell known for? |
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I think reddit has good info here.
This kind of thing is pretty important to get right in all of the supp essays. |