| If it's so easy why can't all the high SAT scorers also be world class athletes? |
Bingo. |
You’re a dolt if you think this kid’s application had anything to do with his admission. Do you think he was stressed whatsoever in applying like everyone else? |
And you get that, as med and law schools don't look at sports for admission. |
Nah - that’s not what this is about. Because then why not accept kids who have been doing a sport for 12+ years but aren’t great at it? |
Stay on topic, please. |
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At least these schools were willing to admit they’ve invested in lacrosse programs to lure full pay, higher income, suburban (white) kids.
https://www.insidehighered.com/news/2012/04/04/midwestern-liberal-arts-colleges-use-lacrosse-recapture-suburban-students |
So if you meant that training for many years and traveling around the country for high stakes competition is more stressful than worrying about your essay (rather than just writing whatever) you should have said it. I would have disagreed with you but it would be debatable. What is not debatable is that athletes fill out applications. The fact that OP doesn’t know this basic fact is an indication that she he/she is uneducated about the process. |
The topic is the edge, the schools want kids who are multi talented. Not singularly talented test takers. |
They are tiny fraction of the people who are successful in their chosen careers. Tiny. Far more people in this world are successful and did not play those sports. In other words, playing lacrosse is not what makes a person successful. |
Lacrosse is a very insular sport and insular world. I do know of working or regular middle class kids who used the sport as their ticket to a golden life. What's often forgotten or ignored is that team sports require a certain dynamic and teaches players the mindset that plays well in the big finance/banking firms and grooming leadership. All the big private universities and LACs clearly prioritize fielding many sports teams and I can see why. Sports was historically considered a compliment to the liberal arts and being part of a well-rounded person. |
They do consider it in an applicant though. If you ace the LSAT, and had top grades, plus played a varsity sport in college, and maybe also were the captain, that added time commitment and leadership on top of academic success does stand out to a law school as law requires excellent time management and leadership. |
| Many kids at our Big3 use it to get into top schools. I know of 5 kids that were recruited for crew in the last few years and then quit within one month of arriving at college. Schools attending include Michigan, Brown, UVA, Cornell. They are completely scamming the schools and once they arrive in campus they quit. All the kids talk about it and it is definitely a college admissions strategy. |
Why would they want to spend their time on that? |
Crew in college is pure misery for the majority of the years. At my school, their practice hours were miserable and the majority of the winter was too cold to be on our lake, so they just spent hours in the gym early morning and afternoon. |