What practical value is there in posting "my kid turned down Cornell for MIT," which is technically turning down an Ivy to attend another school? |
| Aspiring doctors have been doing this forever, to accept scholarships, have less competition for top research opportunities, easier to get perfect gpa etc |
| Except that the "big fish in a small pond" strategy keeps getting increasingly harder to execute successfully. |
I don't think that this thread has any real value but mine turned down MIT to attend a NESCAC. |
| I know of kids this year who turned down Brown, Cornell, and Penn. Going to WASP, Northwestern, and the 1693 program at W&M. |
| Mine turned down an Ivy for UVA. |
Are you the OP from here? https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/1276259.page |
| Daughter did |
Get over yourself. |
He got a full ride to Vanderbilt (sports recruit) vs full pay to Harvard |
It’s silly to include sports in this discussion. Nobody would turn down playing football at OSU or Alabama vs playing for Harvard. Nobody. The NIL dollars plus payments direct from the school would be massive in addition to the potential to get drafted into the NFL. Baseball at Vandy wouldn’t have as much NIL money but would definitely put a kid in line to be drafted into the MLB. |
nah,Columbia |
| yea, full ride UNC. |
She's a frequent poster, but while OP changes small details, it is clear that this is the same person. Her poor daughter, I can't imagine the pressure! |
Your statement may be true for the five-star recruits and/or skill position players, but a player at the bottom of Alabama's recruiting class (yes, some of them are "only" three-stars) and plays interior offensive line, kicker, or safety is way better off going to a Harvard or Stanford. Most of the NIL dollars are going to a small subset of the roster. |