Many students don’t report scores unless they are very high, so the SAT/ACT range for a school doesn’t really indicate who gets in. Lots of kids get in with lower scores. Colleges look at course rigor and grades relative to other applicants from your HS. Also, intended major matters because they are trying to fill many departments. Pick a less popular major. |
Exactly. The UVA parent here needs to admit that. The scores reported are not at all indicative of *actual* scores from the many who went TO. |
Just a guess, but seeing as how so many people in the DC area obsess over colleges, it’s fair to assume that kids would pick up on that. |
Not true. SCHEV reports that last year's incoming class reports having a 1520 at the 75th percentile, a 1470 at the median and a 1410 at the 25th percentile. IT's very unlikely that a 1410 unhooked while male isi going to get in. https://research.schev.edu//enrollment/B10_FreshmenProfile.asp |
Sure, but not in a way they could write a compelling essay about. |
That’s just from those who report scores - and many, many applicants do not but are accepted anyway. If schools eliminate TO, you’ll see these numbers decline big time. |
As has been pointed out to you by several different posters - those are only the scores of those who report. We have no idea what the TO scores were, but it's fair to say those students had much lower scores or they would have reported them. So your info is extremely misleading. |
In the common app it asks parents education college. You can list Alma matter. So if your legacy they will see |