Which of these seem good/doable?

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:You and your son (and these responders) need to look at his app and the apps of his friends more holistically. All As with what rigor compared to his school? Leadership? ECs? Essay topic and content? Any hooks? What state are you applying from? Does your kid’s profile match what these schools are looking for?


He is a good student with two varsity sports. That's it. Honestly this thread is making me feel very shitty. Does everyone's child have very high SAT scores and a million ECs?



Don't feel bad. A 4.0 and two varsity sports is pretty awesome. But it's tough out there when it comes to college admissions. A quick reality check will tell you that UNC and Georgia Tech are not happening. Both are very competitive schools, particularly for OOS. Texas A&M is probably a very tough admit too. It's a very desirable school for engineering and they are only going to take so many kids from the DMV.

Regarding test scores, has he tried the ACT? Usually kids do better on one over the other. The ACT is generally easier, but it's faster. Have him take a timed practice test and see how that goes. He might get a better score on that. If that's the case, focus on the ACT - study, prep class, tutor if you can manage it. Scores do tend to rise substantially when students really grind and study for it.

Also, colleges aren't really looking for a million ECs. They want to see passion, discipline, curiosity, and focus. If varsity sports are where it's at, work with it. Craft a compelling essay that incorporates something to do with the sport. Also, make sure he gets good teacher recs.

The only person a student needs to impress is the person reading the application. That's it. Put an application together with that in mind. All a student needs to do is convince one person that they'd be an asset to their community.

There's 4000 colleges out there. Have your son do a little more research into his likely major and the colleges that interest him. It takes two minutes to figure out that UNC is a nearly impossible admit for any OOS student. And another two minutes to see that Georgia Tech is a brainiac school for STEM kids and also a really tough admit. More research. More realism. It'll all work out in the end.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:UNC, Texas A&M, UCF, USF, Georgia State, Georgia Tech...That is my ds's list so far. Interested in real estate, statistics, urban planning maybe, but not anything set in stone. All As, SAT probably too low at 1270 for some of those now but he just retook.


GT, UNC: Dream on
A&M: High match
UCF, USF: Match
Georgia State: Safety
Anonymous
Your kid sounds great and there will be a place for him, but its important to have realistic expectations so you don't get blindsided.
UNC(<10%) & GaTech (12%) are extremely difficult OOS at any time. Would recommend dropping.
Southern schools are super popular so cast a wider net.
Add:
Auburn (High target/low reach)
VTech
College of Charleston
U Kentucky
Tennessee (High target/low reach)
Miami Ohio

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:You and your son (and these responders) need to look at his app and the apps of his friends more holistically. All As with what rigor compared to his school? Leadership? ECs? Essay topic and content? Any hooks? What state are you applying from? Does your kid’s profile match what these schools are looking for?


He is a good student with two varsity sports. That's it. Honestly this thread is making me feel very shitty. Does everyone's child have very high SAT scores and a million ECs?


It’s a different landscape now. Being a good student is not enough for many schools.
Anonymous
you don't major in real estate. It's a license you can acquire at any time, usually post 18 (that's when I got my california one)
Anonymous
Look also at other big schools in the Midwest (big 12 and big 10). There are some great schools in the Midwest that are a good deal for out of state students and they offer much of the same things that the schools that you listed offer. Also, try the ACT. My kid scored in the 1200s on SAT but got a 32 on the ACT which was good enough for significant merit at South Carolina and some other schools.
Anonymous
Minnesota could happen, especially if applying early (it’s rolling).
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