Your kid will do great regardless and will need to focus on putting together some kind of narrative around interests and write interesting essays. |
Lots |
This. He's earned the right to apply, but so did the other 95% who get rejected. |
What is his narrative? Interests? Major? |
Exhausting UK boosters would say applying through UCAS is the solution 😆 |
... and those other 95% are present at other schools, along with thousands of brilliant kids who didn't apply to Ivy, so don't fear that your kid will be the "only smart kid" at his college. That's ignorant and sets him up for failure. |
Your arrogance is palpable. |
I don’t think it’s arrogant. I think it’s true. Not all private schools are the same. They have their own matriculation trends. Read the “levels” thread and the other private/public thread linked for Peet’s sake. If a 3.5uw from an elite NY private gets you into Vanderbilt ED, the “quality” of that private is determinative in T20 outcomes. |
What’s their IQ? The 150+ kids tend to do really well. |
Pointy is such an old old metric.
That went away. Do what you love, dabble if you have to. Be authentic. My 2024 was well rounded. Played a sport, had a summer job, did some community service, was a member of a club….routine He got into 2 Ivies, 2 10s and several T20s. He also didn’t use an essay coach or private counselor. Be authentic |
Private high school has always been a hook. |
In DC, no. This DC …. Urban Moms. If you’re posting from Chicago or Los Angeles, you should probably say so. |
Is he Black? |
Hook is a well defined term in this context and you don’t get to expand it. See also full pay — also not a hook. |
Yes, a hook is defined as anything that takes spots away from the rich white private school kids who deserve the spots from birth. |