I guess, just such an outlier in that GPA range with the Georgetown, Cornell, etc acceptances. |
Several of the ED schools are not participants in Questbridge. |
Yikes. I know the 4th person list. At Cornell now. This should be taken down. |
Penn took a 1590 kid top 25% (94.38). |
Public information. The high school provides yearly report on their school profile website. https://shs.greatneck.k12.ny.us/departments/guidance/school-profile |
| This feels like extremely sensitive data that should not be available to people outside the school’s college counseling office. I’m also not sure what purpose this data serves to DCUM parents except for giving them false hope. |
| Page 8 - GPA 95.61, SAT score 1560. Got rejected ED from Penn but got into Stanford, Brown and other top places. |
| This is my high school (although quite a few years ago). No weighted grades, and the counselors have relationships with top schools. It’s also why I am totally underwhelmed with NOVA schools. They took care of us way better in all ways than the schools here. Most of these kids will also be full pay. |
Great Neck is West Egg, isn’t it? It’s not just some suburb in New York. |
The school is 75% Asian immigrants’ kids. |
I agree is seems extremely sensitive. I don't understand your point about false hope though. |
Correct, although that part of town goes to North. The school is also relatively small. That’s two years’ worth of results. The ethnic demographics have also been shifting. It is much more Asian now - it used to be almost entirely Jewish. |
OP frames this school as if it is some random NY public high school. It is in a well-known, very high-income area outside of NYC. Most people would consider this a bottom-tier public feeder; as such, it is misleading to think that the admissions results of kids with low-ish stats from this school can happen at any suburban public HS. |
My read of OP’s post is that college admissions is a holistic process. Low-ish gpa will not get you there unless there are something else. The data demonstrates it well. A multi-factor process. |
| It's a Cornell feeder. Very very well known to AO. Extremely well-prepared kids. |