Pre-college summer programs: which are high quality, merit-based, and not pay to play?

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:My DD did a National Student Leadership summer program at Georgetown last summer. I won't say that it isn't pay to play, but it was a very valuable experience for her. She expressed interest in a particular major out of the blue junior year. I wanted her to dip her toes in the major before building her college list. It solidified her interest, which was what I wanted to see. It was a well-run program and she had a great time.


I have heard great things about Georgetown’s summer program. It is definitely pay to play but still a great experience for a high school student.

I don’t necessarily think this type of program will get you into college. I don’t think everything has to be for college.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Most college counselors will tell you NOT to list the college program on your activities list or resume for other colleges (meaning, include ND Leaders for ND; YYGS for Yale; Wake for Wake; MIT for MIT etc).

The exceptions are for "fully funded" programs where the application process is selective AND there is no (zero) fee to attend. In this case, the activity description should include the following: "fully funded (academic/leadership/immersion) program" or "fully funded position" IF it provides evidence of the major.


DC listed their selective, fully funded MIT program on all of their apps. Hope it doesn't hurt their chances
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:The how pay to play doesnt necessarily mean bad quality.

My son is at Princeton now and he spent 2.5 weeks at Sciences Po summer program. It was an amazing program and experience for him.
High Quality: check
Recognized by top schools: check
100% Merit Based? Not quite. Sure there is an application process, but I’m not sure it is very selective. The only 4 kids I know that went there were accepted.

Agreed. I don't think there are many competitive summer programs that impress AOs by themselves--e.g., "Wow, this applicant was admitted to and participated in X summer program." But participation in a summer program can help an applicant by demonstrating/corroborating interest in particular subject and developing skills. And, apart from admissions, they can be really helpful for the student-participants in figuring out what they are looking for in colleges.

My DC did a month-long studio art program at an university. While there was a selection process requiring a portfolio and essay, I don't think it was particularly competitive. But the program itself was great, and DC learned a lot and improved their portfolio. It also shaped what DC looked for in colleges during the application phase. While I doubt the summer program meaningfully moved the needle on DC's applications, DC got into a number of T20 schools, so it certainly didn't hurt. Anyhow, I'm not promoting summer programs over other options (e.g., working a summer job), but they have their place.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Most college counselors will tell you NOT to list the college program on your activities list or resume for other colleges (meaning, include ND Leaders for ND; YYGS for Yale; Wake for Wake; MIT for MIT etc).

The exceptions are for "fully funded" programs where the application process is selective AND there is no (zero) fee to attend. In this case, the activity description should include the following: "fully funded (academic/leadership/immersion) program" or "fully funded position" IF it provides evidence of the major.


DC listed their selective, fully funded MIT program on all of their apps. Hope it doesn't hurt their chances


This is fine and shouldn’t hurt at all. A fully funded program is quite different than 6k+ two week program at Yale.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:UChicago, not cheap but some great ones


I can’t imagine these would be helpful for anywhere but UChicago (and their ED0). Their programs seem unreasonably expensive - 15k for “stones and bones” fossil course.
Anonymous
so nobody here has pointed to a list of high-value, high-reputation, no-fee summer programs. Is there such a list?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:so nobody here has pointed to a list of high-value, high-reputation, no-fee summer programs. Is there such a list?


Private college counselors can give it to you.
Anonymous
Summer Science Program. It's pretty hard core and a disproportionate number go on to MIT and ivies and other top programs.
Anonymous
Admissions Angle on substack has a bunch of suggestions:

https://admissionsangle.substack.com
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The how pay to play doesnt necessarily mean bad quality.

My son is at Princeton now and he spent 2.5 weeks at Sciences Po summer program. It was an amazing program and experience for him.
High Quality: check
Recognized by top schools: check
100% Merit Based? Not quite. Sure there is an application process, but I’m not sure it is very selective. The only 4 kids I know that went there were accepted.


dont you need to be 18 for that? how can you do it for two years in HS


No. It is a program for under 18 (pre-college kids).
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The how pay to play doesnt necessarily mean bad quality.

My son is at Princeton now and he spent 2.5 weeks at Sciences Po summer program. It was an amazing program and experience for him.
High Quality: check
Recognized by top schools: check
100% Merit Based? Not quite. Sure there is an application process, but I’m not sure it is very selective. The only 4 kids I know that went there were accepted.



What does “recognized” mean? What Sumer program would not be “recognized”?



NP. It's a polite way of saying the AOs are aware that Sciences Po is one of the most prestigious schools in France without having to look it up. It's a name brand place.

That probably was a big draw on the app. Because it's an elite marker. Random middle class bright American kids don't randomly decide to go abroad to Harvard-level foreign schools for summer programs. Because they and their parents haven't heard of them.

I only know about the school because I was a French minor and I took a class on comparative EU government in government. It's a school that French politicians graduate from. Most countries have schools like this.

AOs are more familiar with foreign schools because they have to be familiar to do their jobs.

It's nice of PP to share a tip about the school's summer program as some lucky and determined parent or kid may find out about it who wouldn't have otherwise known to look.


this
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:sciences po is 6000 euro for two weeks, doesn't include expenses, you have to be 18.

I dont think that (or the Oxford etc ones) are very prestigious, and that your kid got into college for other reasons
]

You are wrong. My kid was in the program. This is a summer pre-college program. You do not have to 18.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:so nobody here has pointed to a list of high-value, high-reputation, no-fee summer programs. Is there such a list?


google. it works.

https://www.crimsoneducation.org/us/blog/pre-college-summer-programs/
https://ingeniusprep.com/blog/summer-programs-that-count/
https://ingeniusprep.com/blog/arts-summer-programs/
https://www.shemmassianconsulting.com/blog/summer-programs-for-high-school-students
https://insidetheadmissionsoffice.podbean.com/e/the-top-summer-programs-for-high-school-students-and-how-to-gain-admission-to-them/
https://www.summerapply.com/blog/top-10-most-selective-summer-programs/
https://blog.collegevine.com/most-prestigious-summer-programs-for-high-school-students
https://empowerly.com/applications/best-summer-programs-high-school/





If the no-fee part is important, there aren’t many. The links above list lots of high cost programs.


Ofc. You have to do that work yourself and filter it out.

It also is highly dependent on interest. As you can see, it’s segmented out by area/major..
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