Funny, we know one kid at Princeton also in our neighborhood and he wasn't really known as huge intellectual or anything. He also played some weird instrument which apparently Princeton needed. |
I'm the one with the DS. He actually enjoyed high school quite a bit. Fun to him is solving complicated equations, running his software development business, attending tech seminars, hanging with friends and franking learning things. He had a very promising future as an athlete due to some inherent physical gifts but he gave it up mid high school to focus on robotics and math because that was more fun for him. He likely would have made it to every school if he stayed in his sport but his heart is in technology. He is 18 going on 40 and always has been. So, no, we didn't push him to be who he was and he knows no other way to do things other than to his best. To me, a natural intellectual is the very best student to have; colleges did not agree in his case, but it wasn't because he manufactured any part of his life in at the expense of fun. I always tell him, you will never work a day in your life because you love to do what people pay lots of money to have done. |
Thank you for this
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Congratulations! Please share stats, hook, why you are in shock? |
Definitely the college's losses. So many applications across all the tiers - Cal Poly Pomona received nearly 50,000 more applications this year - https://www.sbsun.com/2022/03/29/cal-poly-pomona-sees-record-increase-in-fall-2022-applicants/ - it's a popular Cal State but that is a lot of applications for a Cal State school. |
So is being an asshole working out well for you? |
OMG! |
What are they leaning towards? |
You aren't alone. We approached the college search process in the same way. My DS: ranked 7/365, 3.96UW, 13 APs, 36 ACT, magnet program, multi-sport athlete, captain of one, worked one of those crappy jobs (for three years) that college admissions officers love to see, committed volunteer activity. He didn't apply to a single Ivy. His college advisor put a few on his list but didn't push them and neither did we. He knew he was one of many out there with the same profile and he didn't want to roll those dice. Plus, he wanted a smaller school - even smaller than Dartmouth. He found several great SLACs and smaller universities that he truly loved. In the end he ED'ed to a SLAC that had an admit rate in the low teens (low but double the Ivy's) but that almost no one around our area has ever heard of and he loves it. There is life outside the Ivy League. I congratulate all the kids who did get in to their dream Ivy - I hope it is what they always thought it would be. |
Yale has CS ranked at 20th by USNews, Harvard at #16. Not bad at all, given the overall prestige of the schools, if you can get in. https://www.usnews.com/best-graduate-schools/top-science-schools/computer-science-rankings |
Thanks OP. Needed a laugh. |
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I’m in tech. I keep hearing about kids starting tech businesses. I’ve never interacted with any company with people below 22 involved, and I’ve never heard of anyone buying any software from a company with high school kids involved.
A bright, precocious kid writing software would be a nightmare from a security and design perspective. |
Lots of ways to define a tech business. Mine does app development for companies (and has own subscription based apps) and also does extensive IT services and repairs. Can fix ANYTHING electronic, recover data, build new computers per specs, repair iphone screens or laptop screens that stop displaying, etc. You'd be surprised at how many people want this stuff done. You might also be surprised at how much these kids know about software security and coding standards. My son won the championship at northrop cyber week long patriot event for reverse engineering vulnerabilities - and he had no formal training. He's not writing enterprise software at this point but it's still a tech business. |
| I’d be interested to know from poster at 14:01 what SLAC your child chose? And others they applied to. I think this is our DC’s plan as well. |
My child enjoyed school and is a kid who learns because he loves learning. Kid had serious sports injuries that prevented them from playing their recruitable sport. Kids they played with were recruited. Not having the athletic hook likely hurt a bit in admissions but in the end they’ll be fine. A kid who learns because they want to learn is more often than not going to do better than a kid who needs someone to give them an incentive to learn. The happy, successful adults I know are like your son. Doing what they love because they want to not because they have to. I wish that for all the kids. I think it helps make for a happy life. |