Omg - the dude from The Game with the vocal fry - dropped a new episode….its been 6 months. Has anyone listened to it? |
Transcript?? |
The Yale ones using their actual admissions staff. |
Listening now. Wow, he's brutally honest. Not sure I agree with everything, though (including how anti-sports he is). - Like, don't list Varsity Golf bc it doesn't help you AT ALL if not related to your academic hook/candidacy. A kid should have omitted it for a selective college bc it does not help. - 1480 gets your app thrown away to most T20 (def to a T10) unless you have something stellar/Nobel Prize unique about you, without even ever being read. - Not having APs available at your HS will hurt your application. Don't believe AO who tell you you are scored based on your context. By looking at actual "scoring" from enrolled students, you can see that even valedictorians don't get the highest rigor/academic score.....so its clear you aren't just being evaluated in context. You need to always do more. - They are looking for the best. At the end of the day, it's all about being the best in something. Mastering something. - Two Bs (Even if B+s) will take T10 off your possible list. They're gone. - Colleges are "more anxious" about filling their classes early, so you may/potentially have a better shot earlier. - AO can make innocuous statements that can breed complacency in the applicant pool, bc their job can be to reassure during the fall to encourage the highest number of applications. - high schools that require their HS students to play 3 seasons of sports will screw your kid over, bc they will not be competitive in the larger pool. And the AO doesn't really care about your specific HS's limitation. - View AO as a job interviewer. They are looking for applicants who meet the job requirements. And the end of the day, they won't care much (outside of certain situations) for applicants who can't meet or fill the soft or hard requirements (AP/advanced academic prowess, leadership). They'll just auto-reject - they really don't care. There are no free passes (e.g., if your HS doesn't allow you to found a club, or you can't get leadership bc there is none, you need to find other ways. There is always a different way). - Figure out how to compound your advantages (put your foot on the gas pedal; don't take it off; don't (no really) take it off). - He cites Cornell, Georgia Tech - about absolute course rigor (not in a relative sense) - but the highest-level courses you have taken. So, it will be disadvantageous to you if you don't take AP classes - for example (even if your school doesn't offer) .... - Grade inflation vs. deflation and how it hurts (comparing Horace Mann to Choate) - Test optional consequences - Own your candidacy. There are no excuses. Be outcome orientated. |
Which private school is he referring to that requires its kids to play 3 seasons of sports? |
What about playing a fall and a spring varsity sport? Why would that be bad? |
It isn’t uncommon. NCS and STA require it. I think Potomac does as well. |
He suggests not even listing sports as an activity on the common app unless you are a recruited athlete. He wants you using the after school time doing research or other impactful ECs. So 2 sports is a huge waste of time in his mind. It is a bit extreme. |
lol...and we wonder why some of our colleges are becoming a laughingstock |
From our high school, unhooked, middle class to upper middle class, with some possessing the "ungodly wealth", there have been 20 Ivy admits over the past two years. Zero HAVE NOT played a sport. Not one girl or boy has NOT played a sport.
These are not the recruited athletes. Just regular varsity athletes. Football, cross country, water polo, lacrosse, baseball, swimming/diving, soccer, softball. That guy is FOS. |
Did they play a sport all three seasons? He is talking about schools with a sports requirement. If your kid is playing one season, they can still load up on their passion ECs the rest of the year. But 3 seasons of sports is what is making this guy freak out. |
This guy is also the guy that recommends leaving parent’s occupation off the common app, not listing the colleges where siblings attend, etc. He plans out a super pointy narrative for kids. He has a very specific formula for getting kids into Harvard, Yale, Stanford and Princeton. |
Does your kid have time to do other more relevant stuff? That’s his point. Only as it relates to T20. |
Some sports are year round...baseball, xc/track, football has a fall and a spring, but most do track, wrestle, etc. Sports are part of the PE class in a semester setting, so no one does just plain "gym" for their last period, they opt to play a sport. |
my kids are at a private school in nyc w no APs and it hurts kids 0%. we have unhooked kids who go to top 5 schools. we have dozens who go to T10 schools.
he belongs to this group of consultants who thinks everyone should apply early but not to a SCEA school (HYP) unless hooked. I know this type. they really push their clients to lock up a UChicago or Northwestern. It''s good advice - but in a "dont dream too big" way. |