| What GPA number range is an A-? |
There has been some grade inflation in the last 3 classes in most schools due to covid. Class of 2025 will probably be a reset. |
| I think you could have a 4.0 at SFS with perfect SATs and there's still no guarantee of getting into a top school. No guarantees these days. Kids should do their best and apply to a range of schools. |
| What GPA number range is an A-? |
| For example, if a 3.3 is a B+ and a 3.7 is an A- what is a 3.66 or 3.68 for example |
It's between a B+ and A-. Do you want us to make up a new letter grade? An A-- or B++ or A-/B+? |
Should be 90-92 |
| Does a High School GPA include art classes? |
Yes, but many schools recalculate GPA and omit those classes. |
| Does anyone know of SFS sends Colleges end of year or semester grades too on transcripts? |
I think this is true, and it's what parents don't understand. Sending your kid to SFS yields zero advantage in college admissions nowadays. Schools don't like that the school oozes privilege and want more kids from disadvantaged backgrounds. Your kid will also likely struggle to stand out in a school filled with Ivy-obsessed overachievers with private tutors. If your goal is simply college, then send them to the easiest and least-competitive high school. Being in the top 2% of Dunbar will yield much better results than the top 25% of SFS. Yes, SFS is much more rigorous, but college admissions cares only about DEI and sob stories now, and they consider rich prep school kids to be "oppressors" that they want to keep out. |
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When something’s going wrong
You must whip it |
| Whip it good |
😝 Wishful thinking! Highly selective colleges, in this country, are businesses. They have always coveted privileged students…and they always will. Don’t pay attention to what these colleges say, pay attention to what they do (and the wealth of their student body). https://www.thedartmouth.com/article/2022/10/cradle-to-cap-and-gown-the-prep-school-to-ivy-pipeline https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2023/07/24/upshot/ivy-league-elite-college-admissions.html |
The kids getting into elite colleges from these prep schools are overwhelmingly athletes, legacies, and top of the class. These are students that could've gotten in from anywhere. When people ask "Will SFS help my kid in admissions?" they're asking if an above-average SFS kid has a better shot at a T10, because of the SFS pedigree. The answer is just "no." Schools place a cap on how many students they're willing to admit from an individual high school. Even Harvard-Westlake, Exeter, and Andover understand this. This means that only the best-of-the-best students and those with hooks get into the most coveted schools. Everyone else usually ends up a level or so below. If you're unhooked, it is far better to be in the top 5% of a mediocre public school than in the top 40% of SFS. |