| Does your kid have a strong second choice? Considering the deadline is three weeks out and you mentioned 2 schools, it’s not clear. That would be the real factor for me. |
In the Core students read the same texts, Iliad, Odyssey, the Inferno and study same philosophers, Plato, Hobbes, Descartes as they have for decades (they do add in some modern writers/thinkers but there is consistent content). When they meet alums, regardless of how long ago they graduated, they talk about what they learned from the Core, their favorite/least favorite books etc. It is actually very bonding. |
Cornell also has (had?) a swim test. It was given during orientation week and kids who didn’t pass took swimming for their PE. |
| Emory also had a mandatory swimming test/class requirement, at least when I attended. |
| We have 3 kids who have been through this process and take deferrals to be a polite no. I’d suggest ED2ing to maximize chances and if that doesn’t work out at least Columbia is still on the table. |
Where are you located? Public private school? Stats? Were they ED College or Engineering at Colubia? |
I was one one of those columbia college seniors rushing to take the swim test so I could graduate! I still share that story with my kids and friends. I was a strong swimmer but hated the swim test and PE requirements. Felt like high school. My kid is at another ivy right now without either requirement. Looking back I think the core and multitude of requirement really limited my education. I would have wanted to dive deeper into my major and explore other disciplines, but not much space in the schedule given all the requirements. All schools have gen-ed, etc, but usually have more flexibility to satisfy them. |
Word on the street is that swim lessons and many PE classes are so overbooked you can’t get them until junior year. There are many reasons not to have a swim requirement. But if you have one, and can’t staff the PE classes to teach freshmen how to swim, your school has some serious problems… |