So sad to see average students not get into top schools.
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1900+ test optional institutions. 80+ test free institutions. Tell me more about this tide turning? |
You know the legacy and donor status for kids at all these schools? Amazing talent. |
Not true at our Big3 in '23 |
I'm not the PP - but kids talk and so do parents. I learned far more about the make up our our DC's Big3 class between Dec-June of Senior year than I did between 9th grade and Fall of 12th. I am not one to care about who is a VIP or a legacy etc. But when admissions start to come out - it becomes very clear. |
Yep. 95% of the senior kids know each other very well and they figure these things out when admissions start cranking out. Maybe 5% of the class rides under the radar and it's less clear but in general these aren't the kids going to top schools anyway (because the kids going to top schools are usually the ones who do a lot of activities at school.) Remember, these classes are small--at some schools they're 70 kids and many have been in class together since they were 4 years old! My son is only a junior but goes to school sports practice every day for 2 hours. He knows who is going where next year and why they got admitted--because the seniors on his team all chat while working out. My son knows who is considered to be super smart, who is legacy, etc. He's not even on social media and isn't even friends with these kids but it swirls around him daily. |
The pandemic started in the spring of 20. The class of 22 graduated in May 2022. May of 2021 would be the end of their Junior year? The schools were closed down in the DMV most of 2021. |
| Most legacies nowadays are also top students-so you can’t write their admit off just because they are legacy. |
yes, agreed. It usually takes both. At our school, out of the top 15 students, half got into Ivies as legacies. Those who were not legacies did not get into Ivies. |
They are average in a pool of exceptional kids, not average for our country. In the long run most of them will do extremely well. |
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This should be linked to the current thread asking how admissions decisions are made at privates. Start with where the kid is a college legacy, esp for the lifers.
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I have kids in middle school so I’m not paying much attention yet but I went to an Ivy League school and barely donate or participate in alumni stuff. Does this actually help my kid at all? Hard to tell. |
lol. No. There are too many legacies for them all to be top students. |
All kids getting into top schools are exceptional kids. All might not have perfect SATs, but they are likely exceptionally wealthy, exceptionally smart, exceptional athletes, exceptional writers, have exceptional stories, participated in exceptional ECs making an exceptional impact or have overcome exceptional life challenges. The idea that just because a kid is smart and received top grades at a challenging private should grant them access to their college of choice is irrational. The kids that are admitted generally deserve to be admitted. Many of the kids that are denied deserve to be admitted also. There are more qualified applicants than there is space. Even if you eliminated legacy preferences a lot of students getting denied still would get denied. |
I should say, the legacies successful in the early round are also the top students. At our school, anyhow. |