Econ/poly sci |
I’m the poster here, was BU |
| DC did not get into their ED school but says the kids that did are not coming to class anymore. Seems risky to me, but maybe this is normal. |
My ED daughter is still going to classes and completing work but she has definitely taken her foot off the gas a little (she has been non-stop for 3+ years now) and I fully support it. If she gets a few B’s second semester it’s fine. |
I love this! You’re an A+ parent in my book.
FWIW, my 80s era “tiger parents” allowed me to do the same after I got in to college ED. Their kindness completely surprised me and was so welcome given how burned out I was at that point. 30+ years later, thinking of those impromptu “Ferris Bueller days” makes me smile. |
My kid was accepted to one of HYPSM and still goes to class and does their work. They could literally fail some of their more challenging classes (Physics C, linear algebra) if they stopped going to class. I doubt that their teachers would be sympathetic towards senioritis. |
Not PP but there seem to be quite a few admits from the Bay Area, like at least 3 from Menlo School. |
Not a great idea. My kid got in ED and is still going to class and doing his homework. As far as I know at least! |
| Kids need to submit final year end grades. ED is contingent on that final transcript. Good luck to those who are skipping… |
| Kids get rescinded every year. It’s not common, but it does happen. |
| My kid and their friends have all been going to class and doing their homework. Senioritis is one thing but effectively stopping going to class is a whole other ballgame. |
Pp here. All around the LA area public and private. Duke is an interesting choice for west coast kids with no connection to the school. |
It happened at our DC area private school last year. Rescinded over the summer. |
What happened that led to rescission? How bad were his grades? |
| Our high school’s counselor used to work on the college side of admissions and told us she had to call a kid to rescind. I’m hoping ds who got in ed finds a balance between the stress of junior and first semester senior year and full senioritis. My older one is a total rule follower and top student and her and her classmates had surprisingly intense senioritis. It seemed like she left school early twice a week (at 18 she could sign herself out), but thankfully grades stayed strong. It’s a little nerve wracking |