Yes, you really hope the 3.98 and 4.0 kids ED successfully or else they will take every Ivy spot and shut out the rest of the class. This happened at our school last year too. This kid got in to about 6 Ivies plus Duke, etc in RD and no one else did. |
This happened at our school too except the kid was not in the top 10 kids in the grade but a wealthy URM. He did not get into Princeton early but got into many top schools in RD. |
This illustrates the insanity of the system we operate in! Everyone at my DCs schools is prayting for the top kids to ED successfully! It will be a nightmare if they don't! |
Yep |
agree. |
Totally pathetic to blame one kid. It is much more likely that your kid and the other kids were just lacking. Or your school is. |
go away. |
We have nice friends who don't talk about grades. Obsession with other's grades is a bit SAD. And, you have no idea if the rumor mill is true or false. You lap it up like a puppy. What a waste of time. |
Good for him! Do you know where he ended up going RD? |
Correct and I think public school parents may not realize how small the classes are at these school. NCS/STA are 70 to 80 kids max, so top 10% is only 7-8 kids. Sidwell and GDS have larger classes, but I am not sure on the numbers. Someone else can chime in, but it is probably 125-140? So 12-14 kids in the top 10%. |
ok, so we have two parents. 1) Parent #1 knows the GPA that constitutes the top 10% of their child's graduating class of 75 kids. This top 10% designation is publicly celebrated by the school and the names are listed on the school's website. 2) Parent #2 goes on DCUM and makes fun of a parent #1 (who they don't know) for knowing this information. Repeatedly posts insults about this parent. Now you tell me who is sad. ![]() ![]() |
So you can scapegoat kids for, I don’t know, applying to college? If your school can’t get more than one or two kids accepted at all of the t10 schools that’s not their fault. |
Your private school is doing better than your local public school. But That’s a very tiny percentage of students applying. With the relatively new public schools for math and sciences and other magnet public high schools that you need to test to get in, there’s a lot more competition for seats at places like MIT or Ivy League. AP classes are more available in the poorer communities. If there were two student applicants, same GPA, same AP classes, same test scores. One came from a private school and one came from an urban school with a low rate of graduation then I would say that the student from the urban school had the edge. Private school student would have tutors, prep classes for testing, small classes, excellent teachers, access to the best extra activities. The student who went to the failing urban school and managed to get those types of scores is extraordinary. |
If they have similar stats as some others on n that group of applicants from the same school how would counselors know who ranks exactly where? Don’t essays and the needs of spots filled with those with specific ECs come into play and only the AO would know those things. |
Maybe you both should taking your dueling privileged mean girls routine to the Private school board. Your frequent posts are far more related to your private school dynamics thsn to anything college related. So tired of "Big 3" spam. |