| Two at our CA private, one athlete, one not. |
So Brown owes these families sibling acceptances as some kind of reparation for what has happened? No one is a likely admit unless an athlete or otherwise strongly hooked. Sorry, but this is coming across as very entitled. |
You’re ridiculous. Who thinks twins should be given priority? What about a cousin of a current student? Former neighbor? Someone who had a similar, rare diagnosis as a tween? Anyone could be a support but that’s not what admission offers should be based on. (Show me a CDS that says twins are given priority.) Not only are many kids “qualified” for highly rejective schools, the fact is there are too few spots to accept them all. |
They absolutely want the former kind of student. The latter kind of student can, and should, attend a tech school. |
Brown’s application includes a question about the open curriculum and how the applicant would take advantage of it. If the student can answer this question compellingly, they’re a good candidate for Brown. If they can’t, they aren’t. |
| True. But also of course,many many many students can answer that question compellingly and will still get rejected. |
So this is slightly different, but I'm a Brown grad (though 30 years ago) - I studied International Relations. Because of the open curriculum, I didn't take any math or science classes (other than Economics, which was required for Int'l Relations) during my 4 years. It opened up spots in my courseload for courses across the Int'l Relations spectrum, which is quite diverse. So, not STEM, which is what you originally asked about, but it's sort of the same idea of singularly focusing on an area. I loved Brown and the curriculum. |
|
| I have a stem kid at Brown that’s “premed”, but the way they use open curriculum is to study all angles of health like medical anthropology, systems engineering and AI, economics, public health, etc. |
Happy to hear! My daughter was a recruited athlete to HYP from Holton several years ago. At that time, the only Holton girls who got into Brown, Dartmouth and Cornell were either VIP legacies or high performing black students. |
Why blessing in disguise? Where do you think this applicant would have been a better fit? |
| Does Brown use deferrals much in ED or mostly up or down accept/reject? |
Last years class: Out of 5,055 applicants; 906 students admitted through the early decision process; 900 applicants were deferred and will be reconsidered within the context of the regular decision pool; 3,120 applicants were denied admission. They did have 500 more applicants and admitted fewer this year |
| One legacy got in. One unhooked with national awards didn’t. |
Tech schools have more gen ed requirements than Brown, so not as good. |