| She doesn't know where her school feeds. The only data she has is for Dartmouth, and it's not encouraging. She needs to do her homework in her CCO, not on this board. |
wrong thread? |
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My non-DMV 3.8uw private in niche non-stem got into multiple T20 in RD last year. Key was niche major. Is your kid’s major philosophy or classics or possibly English? With some ECs as evidence? If so, a lot is possible.
ED to 1st choice. Study what those schools are looking for. |
He knows what appeals to him: highly ranked and small. You mean there's more to it than that? |
This - OP did you see the “levels” post from February? It was good |
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How does 3.8 compare with others at his school?
The reason I am asking is that at our school, we also see a similar pattern with Dartmouth: the highest stats/top of class kids don’t go there. The ones who are accepted have lower GPA than the top 10 percent and are not athletes or legacies either. (The school is small enough that one knows the kids). |
Kindly, I don't expect that would you understand. Successful private school students that come from highly rigorous schools obviously have ideas about where they'd like to go to schools, but most of them are also working insane hours each day with school, sports, extracurricular, job, internship, etc. commitments. The parents that send their kids to these schools generally are more involved, or place a higher value on academics, therefore they will do their own research, too. A person who's child is lower energy and from a less demanding school would likely not understand these things. DP |
OP That's not what I said. I can see the data. And for Dartmouth, they clearly admit by GPA from our school. At the WASP schools, they take accept and deny 3.8 kids at basically the same rate. Same with 3.9. (3..95 gets you in everywhere, but we have 1-2 students a year with that GPA). 3.7something sometimes works, usually not. So, my question was: Does anyone know which is the schools cares more about ECs and which care more about essays and LORs. My kid has had full summers - NSLI one summer and working paid jobs others - but not especially compelling for his major. The in-school stuff plus LOR will help with that a lot. |
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How about Colgate or Holy Cross. Bowdoin and Midd are smaller. HC has powerhouse alumni network and only 1 hour into Boston.
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| I’ll find a post from the research I did that showed which schools care most about extracurriculars and national level achievement. It’s not Dartmouth. |
There are the typical humanities -- English, history, and philosophy -- and there are the others where more of a bump can be expected. Which type are we talking about? I think SLACs have been a little slower to get on the humanities bump bandwagon than universities and you will probably have better luck outside the SLAC world. Yes, you can ED to Midd with a good chance of acceptance, but an ED1 to WAS or Bowdoin is probably a waste -- an ED to Dartmouth is still probably more desirable than those, meaning if you think Dartmouth is undesirable, all of these are. Leave the non-Midd top SLACs to ED, and think about other options. Such as: apply Midd ED2 or ED2, incorporate some mid-size unis into the process, apply both ED1 and ED2 somewhere, and if still around during RD time maybe WAS or Bowdoin will take you. |
Here is that thread. https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/1255948.page |
OP the naviance from our school on Dartmouth is very clear: they want kids with a 3.9-3.95. there are zero green checks below 3.9. the yield numbers are terrible - probably bcs a lot of the kids with a 3.9-3.95 have offers from HYPSM. we do send a couple athletes there from time to time. |
Sorry, meant "Leave the non-Midd top SLACs to RD, and think about other options." |
what's wrong with the list the kid has? |