Or, just move to a lower performing NOVA high school, take all the rigourous courses, get more leadership positions, play all the sports, get more house for your money, and keep your higher paid DMV job. It worked out for our kid. Third year at UVA. |
Sorry. Lesser activities. Not fewer. Lesser. Less competitive, less prestigious, less involved. The point is, every year highly qualified kids are accepted to higher ranking, more exclusive schools than UVA, but rejected from UVA. Anyone who goes into the process with a UVA or bust attitude is likely to be disappointed, even if the kid has stats for higher ranked schools or if UVA appears to be a match based on stats and activities. |
Better yet, move away from NOVA altogether. All of my son’s friends in another town outside of NOVA got into UVA just by being regular smart kids with typical ECs. For the kids at our FCPS HS or other FCPS HS, it was a mixed bag. Kids with great stats getting rejected. |
It is exceptionally difficult to get into UVA from any NOVA public HS. |
She’s referring to the NOVA community college path to automatic admission. Virginia Community colleges will path you for automatic admission to a four year college. |
Name the school |
It is exceptionally difficult for some kids, a breeze for others. A lot depends on the kids grades, how closely they followed Dean J, and, yes, test scores can really move the needle. Make sure your kid is involved in their community. Push them into leadership roles. Make sure the essay is not cookie cutter or just a brag sheet of their accomplishments. It should describe a kid you would want to be roommates or classmates with. |
You beat me to it! |
I can name a few that fall into this category: Herndon, Justice, Falls Church, Lewis, West Potomac even South Lakes. Just look up the lowest rated schools. Look at their instagram decision pages. They may not have 30+ kids going to UVA, but they do have a good number. Also, who wants to go away to college and end up running into a bunch of former HS classmates? |
This. NoVA is so extremely competitive for UVA. A lot of great students get rejected just because UVA can’t take all the qualified kids from TJ or West Springfield, for example. Better to apply from a less competitive school like Lewis or Mount Vernon or a non-NoVA part of Virginia. |
This. You don't have to move to a rural area. Just go to one of the crappy high schools. But recognize your kid may not be as well prepared for the rigor of college. |
NoVa is Northern Virginia Community College. They have guranteed admission to zuVA and Virginia tech if you maintain a certain GPA as a full time student. |
The word of choice should have been lesser, not fewer or less |
Not sure I follow. Is the kid from a “crappy high school” that gets 5s on ten AP exams less prepared than the kid from a non-crappy high school, with similar grades, better prepared for college? |
+1 My UVA-bound kid is graduating from a crappy, non-NOVA high school that would horrify the typical DCUM poster. There are around 8-10 from his class going to UVA. They’ll all be fine there. |