The podcast also mentioned parent’s career and income level. They had an abbreviation for middle class as “mid – mid “. And then they had another abbreviation of “NN” to me no need. More than anything I think every little bit of information you were disclosing in the common app is used in some way, shape or form. I think that not only includes your professional information but also the parents educational information, and/or siblings education information. It’s not random or extraneous information. It’s actually part of their quick 6 minute assessment. Almost like a snap judgment about your family life, your financial well-being, your commitment to education and how much drive or ambition you have been instilled in your children. |
I thought Dartmouth had always counted demonstrated interest. Like Northwestern. |
Take EVERYTHING in this podcast with a giant grain of salt. Lee Coffin says a whole lot of stuff in these talks that is completely the opposite of what Dartmouth does in real life. He is now not even in charge of Admissions there which further removes him from any relevance. Signed, A Dartmouth parent who knows more than I thought I ever would about Lee and the BS he spouts online. |
But this session was filled with former readers from other schools too. |
Yes, I don't know as I didn't listen to the Podcast. But just take anything that Lee says about Dartmouth admissions specifically as "oh, that's nice" and nothing more. |
NP. Virtually all top college also have enrollment management consultants, sometimes in house, often external. They use mathematical modeling to determine likelihood of enrollment aka yield both for individual applicants and in the aggregate. All the factors, like parent info, are included in that. The aggregate modeling at the back end of the process, when the admissions director engages in the "shaping of the class" is critical for meeting budgets and this is where decisions may often be out of the view of the regular admission readers. Thus, some admission readers might feel like decisions are "random," as they don't see the algorithmic piece that made some final determinations that weren't congruent with the AO's "vibe." |
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thank you to the OP who started this conversation. Two questions (and I will admit both my kids filled out the common app on their own so I don't know what is on there).
1. On the common app, when they ask about siblings is it just the school they are at or does it ask about major? 2. how do AOs view multisport athletes (varsity level for 3 sports (golf, competitive cheer and lacrosse) per year starting as a freshman? |
1. Only certain colleges request sibling's school. They do not request major. 2. Very generally, sports are viewed as any other activity unless the student is a recruited athlete. Obviously, a 3 sport athlete will be busy, and that's fine, but it doesn't move the needle for admissions in a specific way vs some other activities. Students should choose the activities they want to do. |
Agree, sports really don't get a bump in the scoring rubric. Even for 3 sports. It doesn't even get acknowledged. The scoring rubric shows you how many points you might get for activities. |
Fill us in… He’s listed as Vice President and Dean of Admissions and Financial Aid on the website. |
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Just listened to that admissions beat podcast.
Wow. - Makes me realize what clues need to be in brag sheets for those LOR - Standing out is super important (so many of the acronyms touched on it incl DNSO) - They make a ton of assumptions about financial status & social class |