Last year! But no, ended up elsewhere. Def not an athlete. Aren't they the last people who need them - the whole process is a likely letter of sorts. |
Stats? |
Yup, first gen/low income kid from our school got one a few years ago. Test optional, but their score was in 1200's. |
| We're at a private HS in nyc and several kids get likely letters every year from Ivy League schools. These kids are opposite of FGLI. I think you guys are coping if you think it's only FGLI. It wasn't my kid, but that wasn't because they were FGLI lol! |
She’s 5’4”, 115, blond, blue eyes, and 34 24 35 |
This board and forum survive solely on the idea that everyone else is gaming the system and they’re the only honest players. That’s how they cope with their children not getting what they want. |
this is correct. 1 out of every 20 almost all academically qualified kids get into HYP. imagine who they pull out of the select group to send likely letters. they are kids they want, they know will have other offers. Most kids in America are FG or LI and many are both. DCUM think admissions committees say, Oh look! a son of a Jamaican nanny from Brooklyn with a 1500 SAT - send him a likely letter." That's not it, people. There are many many qualified kids, even qualified FGLI, who get no likely letter and no acceptance letter at all. Get real |
Yale has quite generous financial aid. I’d guess that, in part, it might be to give the prospective students more specific information about things like financial aid, 1st Gen support programs, and the opportunity to make more personal connections with people at the school as they make their decisions. Many of these kids might not have visited the schools they’ve applied to, so it’s also a heads up that the school is seriously interested in them and worth the investment and —possibly sacrifice — involved to visit the school so that they can make more informed decisions. |