| My engineering magnet kid at Wheaton says a lot of the magnet kids were accepted spring semester/freshman connection and thus did not get into the engineering school |
That is correct. Some who are perfect on paper were rejected including a senior who published a book, a Robotics club winner and an Olympiad winner. I told my daughter who got in to not whisper anything as it is an emotional time. Many magnet kids are upset as UMd was their safety and now they are unsure about their chances in the T20 that they applied to. |
If these "magnet kids" treated UMD as their "safety," then they deserve the deferrals. |
Please explain the logic? |
The ACT, unlike the ACT, gets exponentially more difficult and rare as you go up in numbers. The difference between 34, 35 abd 36 is significant. https://blog.prepscholar.com/how-many-people-get-a-34-35-36-on-the-act-score-breakdown |
UMD isn't a safety school. |
+1 |
DP. UMD hasn’t been a safety school for a long time now. My kid had great stats and we considered it a reach. She got spring admission. |
Wow, my kid goes to PHS but is quiet we didn’t realize it was such a bloodbath. He got into UMD Scholars plus Engineering. He does not have amazing stats but had only 1 B on transcript. SAT was a bit low for magnet low 1500s |
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Parents are pissed rightly so that MoCo has very high income taxes and people with kids with high GPAs get rejected the only from UMD and need to pay an extra 60k to 100k to another’s states flagship to send their kid to school.
Unlike VA or NY with only one flagship and one with not strict limits like North Carolina etc on mainly excepting in state a ton of spots giving away to OOS students and tax payers are blocked from going. In my case costing me $80,000 this rejection |
Tad extreme. |
The high rigor magnet school students with good grades and test scores have traditionally had pretty high acceptances to UMD. It's certainly a lesson for the future. No one can take UMD admissions for granted. Numbers of applications will be even higher for class of 2026. Some are part of the 2007 baby boom year, and with the disastrous co-presidents in the WH, more people will be looking for in-state options. |
I;m a new poster, but I agree. 1. When a high-stats, kid who CAN afford other options (and prefers other options) applies to UMD, they're probably taking a spot of a talented instate kid who CAN'T afford an OOS or private school. 2. UMD is not easy to get into. Even for a well-qualified instate kid, it's a target at best, not a safety. 3. It is the mission of the school to serve the population of the state. MOST other states have at least two state schools that are comparable in rigor, majors, etc. (Auburn/Alabama, Michgan/Michgan State, FSU/UF), but Maryland only has UMD. If you are a high-stats kid who can afford OOS or private, don't use UMD as a safety. |
I would add to that *if you have no intention of attending under any circumstances* |
UMBC is perfectly good in tech |