| It is going to be really hard to be engaged in musical theater and be premed. |
I was a STEM major who did sound for a couple theater productions in college. But I did also get paid. |
Get a spreadsheet, map out four years of rigorous course schedule across core classes and interest and review each year. Unless your child is at a really small school she’s going to have fierce competition in HS. If she’s a normal public school kid in VA she will not be the only one who has taken several HS classes while in MS.
Admission to Julliard is its own ball of wax. If she’s thinking about being there it’s obvious that her EC’s are going to revolve heavily around some form of arts (music, dance). So why doesn’t she first try balancing several AP science courses with a rigorous afterschool arts program schedule and then determine if the Columbia/Julliard path makes sense. |
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Johns Hopkins is the very best.
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Research meaning that she understands that 14 years of her life beyond HS will be dedicated to the pursuit of science/medicine/babies? And that lots of folks change their intended speciality in Med School. |
| Consider a direct med program for her. GW has a great one. |
As well as the fact that she knows what she wants to specialize in after medical school. The kid is a freshman in high school. I fear for her mental health. |
| Mount Holyoke. |
This is just a 14 yo with big dreams that her mother is taking way too seriously. |
| Boston College, Boston Univ, Tufts, Northeastern |
BU |
+1 |
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FWIW, I knew a handful of people who at 14 knew precisely what they wanted to do in life. None actually did those things. Most did other interesting things. I don’t know anyone who wishes they’d flawlessly executed their 14-year-old vision for their life.
Reminds me of that line from the movie Dan in Real Life — instead of telling our kids to plan ahead, we should tell them to plan to be surprised. |
Meanwhile, know that New York is not New England — and never the twain shall meet. |
Yes, they are on her transcript. |