OP, you complain that she is disappointed w/ UVA WL, yet you then repeatedly defend applying RD instead of EA because she wasn't that interested. Well, you shouldn't be surprised because clearly, it showed! Both in the RD choice, possibly in her demonstrated interest and likely her app itself. UVA is not a target. Your counselor misled you.
Also, she has 1 likely school on her list. Why? She also only has 2 targets, and VT for ENGR is potentially a hard target. She did not apply wisely. I also suspect that her app could have better conveyed what she had to offer. Pitt and VT are good choices. And Pitt should give her 20k of automatic merit. Get another counselor to help her w/ LOCIs, then invest in admitted students' days for what she's got in hand and psych her up for those. Stop comparing to kids who got in. You really don't know what they bring to the table (or how well their app conveyed that). -Independent Counselor |
Shows what you (donāt) know about the current state of AP and honors in public HSs in the area. |
From an actual APUSH teacher in an open enrollment high school classroom, not elementary: Any attempt to have reading or proper homework assignments done is typically met with massive failures. Because of this, I can't get through material as fast as I would like, and we only get up to barely talking about the Cold War when it's already exam time. Do you really think that kids who canāt keep up arenāt going to affect teacher workload and the pace of the class, especially if there are several of these kids in the class? Pressure on the teacher from admin and parents can be brutal. |
- Your DD should have applied ED1 to JHU. That would have increased her chances to get in. A good counselor would have insisted upon that if DD had her heart set on going there.
- I wonder what story your DD told in her essays. What impact did she have in her ECs? What did they teach her? What is she passionate about? What do you think her teachers said about her? - What was DDās approximate class rank? I know she had a 4.0UW, but were there others with 4.0UW/4.9W? Wondering if AOs judged her against kids who took more honors/AP classes and had higher GPAs. Anyways, like others have said, itās time to find closure and move on to the acceptances. Best of luck to your DD. She sounds like she is super intelligent and has an amazing work ethic, so she will thrive wherever she ends up! |
And almost all of those kids are Asian students. |
it sounds like most or all of the class is not prepared or willing to put in the effort. If it is just a handful of kids, you give them the grades they deserve and hope they get the message |
Class ā24 parent her. This thread has generated so many comments because it taps into a lot of our anxieties, stress, confusion and frustration over a process that unfortunately, is too intertwined with our personal/collective insecurities and aspirations. Many of us can relate to this thread because we all know someone or know of someone who āhad high stats and did all the right thingsā and was still rejected at a lot of top schools. The problem isnāt going to get fixed with Supreme Court decisions, SAT tutors or high priced college counselors. It has to start at the parent level. We parents created the market for this craziness by paying for Kumon, elite sports camps, private college counselors, pay-to-play programs. Kids are jumping through all these hoops because we as parents have certain hopes and aspirations for them. Iām glad I was warned early on that my high stats kid was likely to be rejected by T-25 schools. Itās not the easiest pill to swallow for many of us who were easily accepted into these same top schools with Bās, limited extracurricular involvement, and few APās (and no non-profits or research back then!). However, being warned before hand was a blessing because it forced me to recalibrate expectations early on and focus more on fit and admissibility over prestige for my kid. Another great thing was seeing the examples set by top students from our local area who showed little or no interest in T-25 or WASP schools. They opted for our state flagship, service academies, less selective schools with prestigious niche programs, etc. Thereās a big world of opportunity out there, and maybe if we parents start placing less importance on prestige schools and stop feeding the market for them, for this madness might abate. |
Maybe itās something as simple as for some reason she didnāt bowl over her teachers & their recommendation letters were tepid. |
Well said. |
So accurate. Many parents and students have sunk a lot of costs into this competition long before they encounter formal college counseling in junior year. As a result, the kids are under enormous pressure to do the impossible, every winter this board is full of junior parents in shock about the realities of the college landscape, and every spring itās full of senior parents in shock about the results. |
These posts always get me to chuckle. You are just trying to get other parents to give up in order to give your kid an edge The colleges created this problem by having opaque admissions with moving targets. They can fix it by laying out exact criteria for students to meet in order to gain acceptance. |
Poster above. My kid (ā24 read carefully) has already been through the process. I donāt have skin in the game and am not trying to give my kid an edge. Just share my two cents. |
Any school that laid out exact criteria would wind up accepting more than 25% of applicants, and that would make the school seem undesirable to the status-obsessed parents, thus reducing the number of āeliteā schools theyāre all so desperate to get their kids into and making the problem even worse. |
So I went to an event at my daughterās school last night. I was talking to some parents about how strange it will be for our kids to be heading off to college in a few months. The discussion then transitions to summer vacations plans etc. I leave the group to chat with someone else. Apparently, one of the parentās starts trashing my kid. I was told this by a close friend who heard the conversation. She was angry about my kid getting into a top 10 school that her kid was rejected from. The parent spewed out all amazing things her kid did. There was no way my kid could match that. How would this parent have any idea about my kidās qualifications? Initially, I was angry but in the end I felt sorry for this person. Iām glad the school year is almost over. Something that should be exciting has become toxic. |
Iām so sorry that the parent behaved like this. Congrats to your daughter. Iām so grateful that the parents and kids at my kidās school were very kind and supportive throughout the process and genuinely happy for everyoneās successes. Itās human nature to be envious/jealous and this process doesnāt always bring out the best in people. |