It helps but not as much as a sibling of STA would be. Same with NCS - if sibling is at NCS it does give an advantage. |
| not many can afford $75k/year |
Neither school is $75k |
| There are a decent amount of NCS brothers who are not admitted to STA. I don't feel like I know too many people and I personally know two brothers who were not accepted and they're good students and athletes. |
Must not have had the grades. It is very competitive especially for older years. |
As said it is not the same preference as being an STA sibling. It helps but not guaranteed. |
More like 10% acceptance rate. To answer op it is not 25-30 percent. |
Well acceptance rate is part of how you figure out if your kid is likely to get in. I have an 8th grader who is likely to be a strong candidate applying to several schools including STA this year. Knowing what percentage of applicants school accepts helps me judge how long that list needs to be. |
You really have to break down the numbers. 10% is about right for non siblings/unhooked but siblings will be significantly higher. The siblings can run at 75% or higher. |
It needs to be long |
If it's true that Andover's acceptance rate is around 13% (and when I checked, this claim at least has some basis in reality), this stat does strongly suggest hat the DC area schools' acceptance rates must be higher. |
| Acceptance rate doesn’t show the quality or rigor of the school it shows the popularity of the school. You’d know this if you had a proper education yourself. |
Maybe not. Andover admits roughly 300 students for 9th. The year my son joined the 9th grade at STA there were 17 admits. Andover might be a better school but there are a ton of spaces. |
It's a boarding school with a much higher profile and prestige factor than STA that receives tons of applications from all over the country. |
I get why people care about acceptance rate. It gives them some info about how likely their kid will be admitted and how many schools they need to apply to in order to spread the risk. |