If your high-scorer didn't get in anywhere: where are they now?

Anonymous
If they "didn't get in anywhere" how the heck are they ATTENDING anything much less a safety.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If they really were top scorers with no red flags, its very unlikely they'll end up at a safety. Well, that is if they applied to more top schools other than HYSPM. Most would get into at least one T25.


My kids with high scores did not apply to any of the schools in the "top 25."

Such a stupid retort. If you didn't apply you will never get in. Get it??
Anonymous
Yes: UMD, WM, CWRU, Pitt, Lehigh, BU, UMN, Ohio St.
No: Harvard, Penn, UVA, NEU
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Yes: UMD, WM, CWRU, Pitt, Lehigh, BU, UMN, Ohio St.
No: Harvard, Penn, UVA, NEU

Extremely surprised at Northeastern. Did you submit a 1400 or something? They hate submitters that are below median.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Mine is at Wisconsin, which was a safety. He has said a couple of times that if he had known this was where he was going, he would have had a little more fun in high school and wouldn't have killed himself taking such hard classes. In the end, no one understood what happened -- other than the two rounds of ED didn't work out and then he was stuck in the seventh circle of waitlist hell until early July. He got into one or two schools that might be considered better than Wisconsin but there are more opportunities in his major in Madison. I wish the process hadn't sucked so much and I wish he had been more proud of how it turned out but at the end of the day it doesn't really matter and he is happy.


I grew up in Michigan & Massachusetts, but I think Wisconsin has to be the ultimate “nobody has to apologize for ending up there” school. Clark U kind of fills that role among LACs (I’m aware Clark isn’t technically an LAC). Would be interested in what colleges other people think are like that. Lehigh? U Texas?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:You mean "if your high-scorer didn't get in anywhere you deem acceptable: where are they now?" Because the premise is that the kid DID go to college. The horror of having to go to a target or safety.


It’s a reasonable question. College admissions are a crap shoot for a lot of kids and there are some high stats kids who don’t get into places where you think they would.


That is the whole point. You can’t assume a kid is going to be accepted to a top 20 school. Consider not playing stupid games - really.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Mine is at Wisconsin, which was a safety. He has said a couple of times that if he had known this was where he was going, he would have had a little more fun in high school and wouldn't have killed himself taking such hard classes. In the end, no one understood what happened -- other than the two rounds of ED didn't work out and then he was stuck in the seventh circle of waitlist hell until early July. He got into one or two schools that might be considered better than Wisconsin but there are more opportunities in his major in Madison. I wish the process hadn't sucked so much and I wish he had been more proud of how it turned out but at the end of the day it doesn't really matter and he is happy.


I grew up in Michigan & Massachusetts, but I think Wisconsin has to be the ultimate “nobody has to apologize for ending up there” school. Clark U kind of fills that role among LACs (I’m aware Clark isn’t technically an LAC). Would be interested in what colleges other people think are like that. Lehigh? U Texas?

What is Clark U?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Tufts, Occidental


These are great schools.


Not Oxy
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Yes: UMD, WM, CWRU, Pitt, Lehigh, BU, UMN, Ohio St.
No: Harvard, Penn, UVA, NEU

Extremely surprised at Northeastern. Did you submit a 1400 or something? They hate submitters that are below median.

It was a dang 1560. EA, deferred, WL. 2023 seemed a little chaotic at NEU.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Yes: UMD, WM, CWRU, Pitt, Lehigh, BU, UMN, Ohio St.
No: Harvard, Penn, UVA, NEU

Extremely surprised at Northeastern. Did you submit a 1400 or something? They hate submitters that are below median.

It was a dang 1560. EA, deferred, WL. 2023 seemed a little chaotic at NEU.

Very strange. Must've been yield protection or something.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Yes: UMD, WM, CWRU, Pitt, Lehigh, BU, UMN, Ohio St.
No: Harvard, Penn, UVA, NEU

Extremely surprised at Northeastern. Did you submit a 1400 or something? They hate submitters that are below median.

It was a dang 1560. EA, deferred, WL. 2023 seemed a little chaotic at NEU.

Very strange. Must've been yield protection or something.

IDK. Likely just ANOTHER CS major.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Mine is at Wisconsin, which was a safety. He has said a couple of times that if he had known this was where he was going, he would have had a little more fun in high school and wouldn't have killed himself taking such hard classes. In the end, no one understood what happened -- other than the two rounds of ED didn't work out and then he was stuck in the seventh circle of waitlist hell until early July. He got into one or two schools that might be considered better than Wisconsin but there are more opportunities in his major in Madison. I wish the process hadn't sucked so much and I wish he had been more proud of how it turned out but at the end of the day it doesn't really matter and he is happy.


I grew up in Michigan & Massachusetts, but I think Wisconsin has to be the ultimate “nobody has to apologize for ending up there” school.


PP has gotta love it when people here scoff at Wisconsin as they often do - “it’s no Michigan… going downhill… not where the tippy top kids go…”
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Tufts, Occidental


These are great schools.


Not Oxy


Oct is pretty good …
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Mine is at Wisconsin, which was a safety. He has said a couple of times that if he had known this was where he was going, he would have had a little more fun in high school and wouldn't have killed himself taking such hard classes. In the end, no one understood what happened -- other than the two rounds of ED didn't work out and then he was stuck in the seventh circle of waitlist hell until early July. He got into one or two schools that might be considered better than Wisconsin but there are more opportunities in his major in Madison. I wish the process hadn't sucked so much and I wish he had been more proud of how it turned out but at the end of the day it doesn't really matter and he is happy.


‘sconsin guy is gonna derail when he sees your post.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:The world has changed - State Schools are harder to get into. Who would've thought VA Tech and UVA is not where a good percentage of a VA HS went to.

The hard to get into schools of ole days are not that hard: I was surprised to see Rensselaer is like 60% it was 20-30% just 10 - 15 years ago. Vassar is getting dragged through the mud on this forum - that used to be hard to get into.

And easier schools are now hard: Swarthmore.why? besides the dukakis bump - anything else?

Some are severely under valued.
if Bryn Mawr College has a 98% medical school acceptance rate - why is the acceptance rate to the college only 33%. I thought medical school as impossible to get into these days. If my kid said medical school - I'm thinking this school for Bachelors. https://www.brynmawr.edu/postbac/about-program/director#:~:text=Our%20graduates%27%20history%20of%20success,rate%20consistently%20exceeds%2098%20percent.

Feel like we are in a college bubble - why apply to xyz? because everyone else is and no one will respect you if you don't go there. And one day - all the single digit acceptance colleges will drop to double digits. Investment devalued. See Rensselaer.


As far as I can tell, it's harder to get in everywhere. Vassar was never hard to get into. When I graduated HS 30 years ago, Vassar was barely above a safety. UVa was pretty hard, but not nearly as difficult as it is now (even though its ranking has dropped), and RPI was also not as difficult as it is now. UCLA was considered a safety back then, and now it's top 30. I can't think of any school that is actually easier to get into than it was 25 years ago.
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