Oh for sure, totally. |
| I mean, good for you OP. But it shouldn't be a great surprise that (1) top private schools don't focus solely on academic potential in selecting applicants and (2) top public school grads get into good colleges. |
| Wherever your kid goes college, please teach them that more important than where they go, is what they do with their time there. The same can be said of high school if your child is mature enough to process this ideal. |
Yeah, and both of these things are magnified for high-scoring kids in the high school Class of 26 (of which I assume OP’s kid is one), because they applied to 9th grade when scores were worth the least (colleges were making noises like they’d all stay test optional forever, and private high schools were taking their pointers from Harvard’s arguments in the SFFA case), and they’re applying to college amidst the sudden return of test mandatory (in a year where it seems like even the colleges that stayed test optional are worried they’ll lose all their high-scorers to the test mandatory schools). Once college admissions settles down, the private high schools will again be better at picking the kids who the colleges will want four years hence, and everyone will go back to attributing the results to the private high schools. |
| And one more: getting into your dream college doesn’t mean your life is set, and going to your second or third choice college doesn’t mean your life is doomed. |
| Lotta sour grades on this thread! |
Something doesn't compute. Go look at Sidwell's class of 2025 college placements and literally 60% are attending top 20 schools (including top SLACs) and like 85% attending top 50 schools. There was a group of like 6 kids choosing Tulane, and then some D1 athletic recruits at Kentucky and ODU...it's a no-brainer for the basketball player going to Kentucky...which are outside the top 50. That leaves a small %age attending a random college. Perhaps they don't care if their kid is at Harvard...Dartmouth will do...or Northwestern...or WashU...but they certainly care about a generally high level of college placement. |
| Funny how easy it is to say go public when you have a good public option. Not all of us do. |
| A lot of tone deaf threads in the Private School forum. This is one of them. Elite concerns and "problems". |
| Congrats OP. Getting into Wharton is impressive! |
I do think the students from public who get into these top schools are more impressive than the kids from private schools. |
They are all kids, each kid is just different. The most defining thing about them isn’t public vs private school. You really need to get out more. |
+1. HYP from public but kids in private since K. I care more about fit than college rankings and DCs certainly don’t need to go Ivy. |
That is the message for Friday. It is the kid. Not the school. The kid can thrive in many different environments. |