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I think it's a few things. Students are becoming much more strategic with where they apply ED/SCEA. Top students are realizing it's pointless to apply early to Harvard, Princeton, Yale, or Stanford unless they have a major hook. So that's four schools gone. Columbia is becoming less appealing because most students don't want all that noise. So that's five schools that most of the best students are not applying to.
Among the strongest young men in particular, they want to see solid engineering and business programs, so they're looking at those schools instead of colleges that are historically weak in those fields. I don't think test optional policies matter that much for strong students. Most of the T25 were TO this cycle. Generally, it's students with a 1400+ who are deciding not to submit. It's not a bunch of 1100s who are sneaking in through the back door. And all of those students have AP scores to back up their transcripts. Also, there is much more desire to get out of the northeast for college these days. And an Ivy brand resonates much more with parents than with the students themselves. But really, a top school with good business and engineering and where the best unhooked students can apply early is going to get a lot more attention these days. I think schools that have a lot more gravitational pull for various reasons are Duke, Vanderbilt, Rice - the southern schools - and Cornell, Penn, Northwestern - because they are good in engineering and business. And, importantly, a student applying ED will have a shot at these schools. |
| It's Test Optional. That's it. |
Same. And bc they gave a giant Greek life which is making a resurgence nationwide everywhere. |
+1 |
It really is that simple. The TO schools are loving it, they get extra $ in applications, get to look artificially selective, and can continue publishing high test scores that a fraction report. |
+1000 |
this right there. The kids who didn't apply this year wouldn't have gotten in anyways. |
| Who keeps trying to make Rice happen? It’s a great school but most kids I know think it’s a niche school for quirky kids. |
Sure, because most kids realize how near impossible it is to get into the Ivies. |
The word “quirky” needs to go away. Not every smart kid wants to join a fraternity or sorority. Mean mom energy. |
Would you prefer I say school for nerds? Quirky seems preferable. |
| I don’t know the word, but my kid is in this category where they are very social, likes gym, lowkey get togethers, not a partier with no interest in Greek life. Plenty of these types and quirky isn’t the word. |
| There are actually podcasts about this? |
I think we are describing different things, quirky fits my purpose. |
Agree, but feels like everyone does this overly simplistic quirky or Greek/partier classification. Or maybe it’s just me? |