She was accepted to UNC with a 13 percent acceptance rate and waitlisted at some tough schools. Again - every school where she faced rejection accepted less than 5 percent of the applicants. where was the guidance? Why not more schools like UNC and less like Princeton if she wanted better results? |
It also doesn't account for foreigners who are almost always paying out-of-pocket. I don't know why this boy thinks he's all that. He is not. |
The millions under-performers are happy that high-performers end up in the same schools. Which is exactly the title of this thread suggests. |
She was rejected by UMD for some odd reason |
| Lots of high performers from all manner of high schools are rejected from Yale and Harvard. You have to be kidding me. She looks amazing but she is somehow entitledto go to Duke or MIT? The disappointment is heart breaking but she has very good option. |
The vast majority of students at HPY fit into some box or they would be rejected. They are not regular kids that score high. If you spent time talking to admitted students you would realize that students typically have something special beyond high scores. (Other kids are not in a position to judge and may not have knowledge of out of school activities.) |
| At this rate, where do the average/just above average students end up if all these guys are ending up in state schools? |
Agree. These posters saying he needs to be a Carnegie Hall level musician have a 10-year-old's level of understanding of college admissions. |
50-150 just like it was in the old days before everyone was told to skip local college and go to elite schools. The ivies were built to educate a small group of kids and have not expanded their class size so now they are impossible for anyone to attend. |
I don't think this is sad at all. These are good test scores. So what? I wouldn't want my kid going to a school full of people who just had good test scores. Quite boring. (And yes, my kid had these scores as well.) |
What is rhe tok kid saying to all the accepted kids? I deserved your spot. My attributes and sacrifices are better than yours and you should step aside for me. |
Ha ha. Nope. Unless you are first Gen with a great story of overcoming hardships that is the standard. |
Agree. The guidance to apply to nearly every Ivy - as different as they all are - is the guidance to ensure you can't show yourself to be a perfect match to any one of them. With so many kids with top stats it's isn't good enough to be good enough. You have to show why you belong there more than the others or the pure numbers game will kill you. Do not shotgun the ivies. Figure out which one you fit best at and make that case as strongly as possible. If you hire people, think of it this way: ever have someone come in, know all about your business, what you do, and what you are proudest of? Someone who has really done their homework and doesn't want a job but wants to be part of your team? That enthusiasm SHINES, and stands out way more than 50 points higher on the SAT. |
Community college. Then they transfer to great majors with a 4.0 GPA. They are equally successful. In the end, to get a leg up - no student debt, employable majors, no drama in family life and good health. |
Something special beyond high scores as in donor and legacy parents? Dartmouth and Cornell are not HPY. Not sure if you know what that abbreviation stands for. |