On only a quick scan, it does look like some local publics can place 3-4 to Ivies and other selective schools. Percentage of applicants basis can be misleading...the same 25-30 kids from a school could be applying to the same 8-12 colleges. With common applications now, it doesn't require a lot more labor to apply to many more but does require several more application fees. Sidwell's nature won't be to publish that; however, just that would not cast the brightest light. You mean to tell me 25-30 kids from Sidwell don't apply to all 8 Ivies (or most) for a diversified shot? I'd chuckle to hear it suggested that isn't the case. That is certainly a demographic where a few hundred dollars more in application fees is not over burdensome. Is Sidwell lousy on a year where it goes 4 for 25 at an Ivy? I would not think so, and thinking so would be unfair. |
I'm not sure I follow the thrust of your post. I probably need my afternoon coffee. I hear your point that kids from Sidwell and other private schools might apply to multiple Ivies, which can make it challenging to get an apples-to-apples comparison of admissions rates. But given the significant wealth in this area, I suspect many students at local public schools -- especially at the top end of the class because of correlation with SES -- will also have enough family money to be able to afford to apply to multiple Ivies. On a tangentially related topic, I also suspect many of those public school students will have legacy hooks too. It seems to be a common assumption around here that many private school kids accepted to top colleges have legacy advantages, and I don't doubt that's a common factor. But people often seem to ignore the fact that there are plenty of Ivy-educated parents in this area who send kids to the many strong public schools. |
That is DEFINITELY not the case. Maybe 3-4 Ivies, but Sidwell limits its students to 9 applications and the counselors would never allow eight of those applications to be to Ivies. |
The application process is more complicated than you make out. The hooked kids -- legacies etc.-- often apply to only one HYPS school for Early Action and if accepted, tend to go to that school. My guess is that it mostly the unhooked kids who don't get in the first time who are applying to a diversified set of Ivies and playing the percentages game (and also the hooked kids who didn't get in early and may or may not be hooked at other schools). |
The school's college office would not view application to all eight Ivys as a "diversified shot". Not by a long shot! Even for the top kids. |
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Sidwell limits applications? Limits the # of Ivies? How?
That's one stop sign I'd run. Sorry, the best interests of my kid wouldn't be dictated by a college counselor at any school. |
They would tell you that you and your kid are foolish. No sane applicant would put all of his/her eggs in the same basket of highly selective schools, anymore than one should put all of one's savings portfolio into dot com stocks during a tech bubble. |
+1. The hooked kids apply early action/decision to their hook school bc that is their best shot. Applying with the gen app pool really lessens their chance of getting in. Was told this by the admissions office at the ivy I attended. |
| Sidwell does limit applications to nine. |
Probably a wise limit. If a kid cannot limit his pool of potential colleges to nine or fewer, he's not thinking carefully enough about the process. A blunderbuss effort to "win" by large numbers of applications suggests a lack of focus. It also would suggest the kid is trying to run up the score on admissions, which is a dumb game. Focus should be on quality of applications over quantity. |
Plus, the "value add" of college counseling at independent schools is that the counselors have lots of time to work with the students and then to communicate and follow up directly with colleges, particularly in the regular application season. It's a lot easier to do that with a limited, focused list of schools instead of 15-20+ applications. |
Oh, honey, passion is out; grit and resilience are in. And, FWIW, my 3.5 GPA 2300+ SAT Sidwell grad is at a top 5 school. But, honestly, this doesn't tell you all that much -- the ECs, recommendations and essays count for a lot. |
Spot on. The cohort is a huge factor in admissions. |
Or not . . . http://www.nytimes.com/2015/10/30/business/the-narrative-frays-for-theranos-and-elizabeth-holmes.html?ref=business&_r=0 |
That's just not the culture at Sidwell. Sure, there are some crazed parents who would encourage their kids to do that, but, for the most part, the kids wouldn't do it. |