| Dean Cain, who went to Princeton, sent his son to High Point. |
https://eanesisd.diligent.community/document/ac107808-c89d-460d-9964-6e481b5e14a2/ You must not be that familiar. Can’t find a link to HPHS but here.. very similar TX public school with applications to UT Austin: 359 applied 297 accepted, do the math- that’s over 75 PERCENT of those that applied that were accepted and 87 ultimately went |
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I went to in-state big public western flagship as did most of the honors/AP track students from my high school.
When I saw one of my HS classmates I said hi and kept walking. Their presence didn't affect my college experience at all. That's a dumb reason to not go to an excellent in-state option. |
297, read the report |
The accepted includes the CAP program. |
| No it doesn’t. Again, stop doubling down and just admit you’re wrong. High achieving high schools in Texas have a much greater admittance rate to UT Austin than 6 percent. |
Yes -- don't you think that was a political decision? If the DC doesn't want to be enmeshed with the right wing, he shouldn't go to High Point. If he loves the idea of being on the right wing fringe, go for it. |
| UT’s instate acceptance rate is 40 percent, not 6%. |
| Unless he plans to play lacrosse as a career than UT is the obvious answer. |
I mean, that kid is so well-connected through family, wealth, and fame that it almost doesn’t matter where he goes to school. A more average person will be much better suited in life and career with a degree from UT. |
| HP |
We considered giving our child $$ if they used their scholarship that could be used for a graduate degree or down payment on a home. We saved for a private school but wouldn’t give the full amount, maybe $150-200k cash to be used towards graduate school or a home later. |
Nobody is saying it is 6%. That is the auto-admit ranking. Top 6 percent. |
This. UT is the better option, unless he only cares about lacrosse and nothing else motivated him. |
I just wonder if it’s better to spread wings and get out of state and then use that $$$ saved for undergrad for grad school. Maybe even go back to UT for an MBA later or Masters. Or use for real estate investment. I think that’s a bigger leg up sometimes. I know a lot of people who are mid 20’s or 30 and finding it impossible to save the $100k needed for a DP for a new home. I don’t necessarily know if the name of the school matters as much now, especially if neither are top 10 or close to it and you went as a recruited athlete. |