If that’s true, then that’s really unfortunate. NCS is as academically challenging as Sidwell. Any NCS student that has earned close to a 3.8 cumulative GPA has done well. That should at least get an NCS student into WashU, Emory, or UVA. |
WashU, Emory require a 3.9 from NCS. UVA has not admitted beneath a 3.85 for years unless ED. They mostly take the 3.9+ girls. |
Yikes—I feel sorry for NCS girls! That’s ridiculous! |
Not true. My DD did not have 3.85 and got into UVA a couple of years ago. Same is true at Sidwell too. |
No...they don't care at this point...they care about how much $$$ you have...that is---can you pay the whole deal? |
Then things have changed. It's literally only red below 3.85 for the last 3 yrs. |
I wonder how much of this is NCS specifically and how much is the admissions rates for girls. Wonder if girls with lower gpas are admitted from Sidwell, or not. Gender obviously doesn’t show up in Scoir. |
Ridiculous to feel sorry for anyone at NCS. |
This makes a lot of sense. I've never seen the data compared by gender at Sidwel so I couldn't tell you. I will say that in general, Sidwell gets much better results with lower GPAs than NCS does. There have often been posts on here that Northwestern and Vanderbilt are possible ED with a 3.7-3.8 from Sidwell while from NCS these are 3.9+ schools, even ED. |
Can get under this at NCS for U Chicago and Michigan for sure. |
| DC was around a 3.6. He’s attending a top 20 SLAC that has about a 10 percent admission rate. School rigor matters and colleges know which local privates inflate grades. |
| Just curious - what is the likely minimum GPA for NCS cum laude then? They only count two years of GPA for that but still most admitted to cum laude would be the top 20 percent of class I guess. |
I believe cum laude was 3.90 last year and higher this year-- close to 3.95. It was a smart class. |
NCS only counts two years for cum laude? |
No for cum laude they only count sophomore, junior and first semester of senior year. For the flag it's 2 years (only junior and senior year) |