Huh? The poster was responding to a post that said " I wouldn't want my kid to go to a school full of spikey kids". If you don't want your kid at a school of spikey students, then don't send them off to a school that is full of spikey students. |
I am sure there are great students with no spike. That does not mean, for example, that, MIT is a great fit for that kid. Maybe it is, maybe it is not. I think the posters point is that instead of being pissed off that the MIT admissions department is not listening to some anonymous DCUM poster for input in how to choose their students, put that energy into helping your kid find a good fit. |
You make a fair point though MIT is a bad example. I'm guessing they are less impressed by kids who saved the world or started the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Fan Club at their high school than most other schools - they are looking more for pure intellectual horsepower, which can primarily be demonstrated by grades and test scores. Sure, research or whatever might impress them, but is less critical. |
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I am pretty sure middle class is not sued to represent the actual middle class but UMC in this debate.
The question will always come back to when you have more qualified applicants than openings how will (and should) AOs differentiate. If all you are doing is deciding between highly qualified well rounded kids that truly is a lottery. I think of a spike as a way to make your kid stand out for that institution. I did not understand the assignment for my first highly qualified student. I do for the second. Vastly different application outcomes. |
Holy shit. I was wondering how the heck montgomery county was catching strays. |
+100000 Same here for our DC1 and DC2. |
So you don't want to use objective metrics because the students would be boring but you don't want too much weight on spikes because they are often manufactured and fake? If you can't stand out with academics then you have to stand out with spikes. As for merit based systems... Almost the entire rest of the world uses only objective metrics and still manage to have vibrant campuses but that can't work in the USA. |
As the mom of a spiky kid (not a “spiky” kid) - no, you are making this up. A kid who is actually spiky is a kid who is different in a lot of ways and it cannot generally be manufactured. So that means our kid gets rejected some places and accepted places where they “get” the kid. I don’t think my kid deserves any priority! |
LOL at the "kids launching little rockets in the backyard." That was my kid. But DC was also a top student and a varsity athlete with gazillions of hours of community service. But I do think it was the rocketry habit that led to admission as an engineering major to T20 schools. My sense is that most of the highly selective schools are looking for well-rounded academically gifted students. But it's the spike - another word would be passion - that makes them notable and interesting. Well-rounded is the baseline. It's the demonstrated passion for something that appeals to universities looking to fill a diverse class with lots of interests and talents. |
MIT is as good an example as any. Every university has their priorities for admission based on that institution. Time and energy is better spent finding the institution that is looking to best serve you particular student as opposed to trying to rage at an institution that is not prioritizing your particular kid for whatever reason. Looked at so many places with all my kids. Even the ones that ended up at HYPSM were well suited to one or two places in that group but not others and did not apply to the poor fits. |
| My spike was that I didn't have a spike. Got into multiple Ivies. I was a non-conformist like all my other friends. |
Very high scores get cooked every cycle. All they do is get you onto the field. |
| Is spiky the same thing as pointy? Pointy being laser focused on one “passion” that do for years and in-depth and it engulfs the student. What’s spiky? Lots of passions that do for hours a day? |
Spiky denotes achievement—national awards. Everyone can be pointy. What you want is for that pointy thing to become big. A big spike. |
You are all alike. |