So do thousands of others. (Tens or hundreds of thousands in TO world.) |
You seriously think there are "hundreds of thousands" of high school seniors with perfect 4.0 uw GPAs AND who have taken 9 AP courses to include AP Physics, AP Calc BC, etc. AND who are Eagle Scouts AND have the equivalent of OP's kid's other accomplishments? No way. |
Exactly. Also, OP never did say where kid goes to school, did she? “Perfect” from one (where up to 10% of the class counts as the top 1%—makes no sense) is not as “perfect” as an UW 4.0 from a more rigorous school. And OP, the sock puppeting is a bit much. |
NP here—hi OP. There may not be hundreds of thousands but there is certainly at least a hundred thousand. Public high schools give out 4.0s like candy. 100,000 would still be less than 1% of graduating seniors. So PP is right that there are hundreds of thousands of stellar students competing for the same spots. And there isn’t just one kind of “perfect.” |
Come again? ![]() |
It’s not less than 1%, but more like 2.5%. There are about 4 million graduating students—and that’s just the US. Point still stands, there are at least 100,000 students as stellar or more so than OP’s kid. |
And it's likely even harder to get in 3 years later. This is precisely why I told my kids to find somewhere they can easily switch majors to what they want. Even all As in the intro CS courses/math courses does NOT guarantee you admission into the CS program. And what if a kid struggles freshman year and gets an A- or B+? No CS degree for them. When in reality they would do just fine at a school that let's kids select their majors. |
About 16,000 students score 35 or higher on the ACT. Another 16,000 score 34 (which is effectively the same for admissions purposes). |
And many of them are applying to 10-20 schools, often a similar group of schools as everyone else. When the acceptance rate is low, there will be highly qualified students turned away. We are all just pointing out the the OP that their kid is not 1 in 1000, they are in a group larger than that and those scores do NOT guaranteed admission at elite/low admission rate schools |
They aren't a dime a dozen in the general population of kids applying to colleges, but they are a dime a dozen among the students applying to top schools and top CS/Engineering programs, and that its the relevant point. |
By GPA alone, sure. But you're conveniently ignoring the fact that the student has taken/is taking 9 APs across a range of subjects - to include ones likes AP Physics and AP Calc BC - on top of other achievements (Eagle Scouts, etc.). Are there thousands of equivalent kids? Yeah, probably. But 100,000? Again, no way. |
124,335 kids took the Calc BC exam in 2021. 136K took Physics 1, 48K took Physics C: Mechanics, 18K took Physics 2. Given that most kids (in our school, anyway) who take BC also take at least one AP Physics class, 100K+ is reasonable. https://www.turito.com/blog/ap/the-most-popular-ap-exams-every-high-school-students-should-consider |
OP said her kid took AP Physics C (among other tests). And per your figures, only 48K took Physics C. So no, 100K+ is not reasonable because less than half that amount took AP Physics C. Plus, not all of those 48K had a perfect 4.0 uw GPA in addition to the other accomplishments listed for OP's kid. And this is all ignoring the very high SAT score, which is at least considered - NOT ignored - by test-optional colleges. |
I think OP is a troll and this is a trolling post. |
OK, you got me. You've completely convinced me that this student is a unique individual, head and shoulders above the rest of the admissions pool everywhere, and should be accepted early to their choice of major at all schools. |