But you think private schools are harder? I know for UT Austin in state lots of kids get in with less than perfect grades/scores by choosing less selective majors. |
Ivy and Stanford are legacies and super kids. Top 15-30 you have a shot. Make sure you understand the defines for merit aid. Some schools require your application in early. |
| unhooked from the DMV, maybe T39-29. An ED full-pay boy might make a difference at a few t20s. I would not waste an ED on a T10 school. |
Harder what? Harder academically or harder to get in from privates? Of course in state kids get into UT Austin and every other state school with lesser grades and applications. That’s the way it works. |
I’ve heard the cutoff occurs at 1520/1530/1540, depending on the source. |
| Normal smart are the athletes and donors kids. They don't do anything special except their sport and be rich. They take up a lot of the spots so make a good list. |
No I mean private T20/30. Are they harder to get in than publics. I mean yes ins tate Umich/UT Austin etc will be easier. But are the public OOS harder than privates? Prob too hard to generalize |
Flagships generally look at stats (other than Michigan, where the essays matter; awards also matter for Michigan). So that's why people keep mentioning the same public flagships. T20 privates are holistic, and they are looking for certain attributes to fill a class. To get the most tailored advice, you might want to start a new thread with your kid's profile so you can figure out if they are (1) competitive for a top school, and if not, (2) is there anything that can be done? For top privates, it's so much more than top GPA and test scores. They want the whole package: leadership, community impact, collaboration, and intellectual heft/depth and vitality. Top schools are not looking for “well-rounded” students; T25 are really looking for students who are more “angular,” meaning they’ve developed a high level of depth in something meaningful. It's not about your DC's achievements; a strong T25 application shows what they've learned or how those experiences shaped them. |
The cutoff is actually much lower to get your application read. Sometimes 1440. The test score won't make your application - plenty of perfect test scores and 4.0uw aren't even waitlisted. Now, having a higher test score can help bolster the case of a STEM candidate, but I know of a test-optional humanities applicant admitted to Northwestern this year in RD (private HS). There is no clear line in the sand. |
That cutoff I mentioned was the score below which AOs in top Ivies would think your SAT score is low! |
| Go test optional if you are below 1500 and they will treat you equally. Worked for us! |
This kid wouldn't have gotten into to other schools with higher test scores. https://www.reddit.com/r/collegeresults/comments/1sk399n/36_act_scorer_gets_rejected_everywhere_selective/ Same here: https://www.reddit.com/r/collegeresults/comments/1sicrdp/midwesterner_applies_to_30_schools_and_bags_top_1/ Imo, they needed to not do what everyone else does. Go the other direction if every other BME or CS major is going one way. They just seem the same as all the other applicants. When applying to majors with the greatest number of applications, you need to not look the same. Also neither appeared memorable. The 2nd one had some great T20 options though. In contrast, look at this memorable/unique major/application profile: https://www.reddit.com/r/collegeresults/comments/1shsve1/hookless_wasian_defies_all_odds_and_gets_accepted/ |
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Normal smart? What does that even mean?
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It's all about context and peer group. Look at your high school's college counseling profile - it will list the average. From West Virginia, a 1400 would be considered amazing to Yale (and they have explicitly mentioned it on their podcast). Always, it's about high school context. |
SAT over 1520 but no fancy EDs thanks to rich dad. |