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. |
DC listed their selective, fully funded MIT program on all of their apps. Hope it doesn't hurt their chances |
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. |
This is fine and shouldn’t hurt at all. A fully funded program is quite different than 6k+ two week program at Yale. |
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. |
| 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. |
| Summer Science Program. It's pretty hard core and a disproportionate number go on to MIT and ivies and other top programs. |
|
Admissions Angle on substack has a bunch of suggestions:
https://admissionsangle.substack.com |
No. It is a program for under 18 (pre-college kids). |
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/ |
this |
] You are wrong. My kid was in the program. This is a summer pre-college program. You do not have to 18. |
If the no-fee part is important, there aren’t many. The links above list lots of high cost programs. |