People need to focus on the education, not the name brand. The top cohort at nearly 200 colleges is essentially the same kind of kids. |
In our school it's the legacy VIP that get an extra thumb despite clearly lower credentials (yet - let's be clear - they will do just fine at the college). The plain legacy who are accepted are typically among the strongest students - are they point for point as strong as their peers that get rejected - who knows? But within this high achiever group - that doesn't matter so much. But it is clear that the legacy pushed them ahead of their similarly qualified peers. |
This is well said and it's the same at our school. In any given year you may have one VIP legacy admitted (often with slightly lower credentials than the top students), one very top student legacy, and then 5-10 legacies who are rejected. At these schools plain old legacy does not guarantee much because there are so many of them, when taking into account the fact that most kids have two parents. The odds that one parent went to an Ivy or Ivy+ are so high at these schools. |
| We have friends with kids at top publics, Whitman, Churchill, the Blair Magnet etc,. The same thing is happening to those kids-lots of kids with high test scores, grades, great ECs and getting deferred from their top choices. It's not just limited to private school kids. |
Difficult to convince people who focussed on the brand for k-12 or even just HS. People think they are owed a spot. |
What schools are you hoping for? Ivies? |
| My DC was accepted ED1 as a garden variety legacy-it can still happen with a strong GPA, max rigor and highest test scores. We aren’t huge donors. |
Agree as well. It is the private schools that are not talked about as much that are getting their kids in. |
That backlash is already happening. |
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]^^^In looking at the Insta pages of all the “top” DMV schools that would be a false statement. Seems like at least 20% of most classes got in ED1. Granted, lots of athletes, URM and legacy but still…[/quote]
There really aren't "a lot of athletes" as most keep saying. Less than 10% of the IG admits are athletes.[/quote] Unless you are talking about St. John’s and their Harvard, Princeton, Yale, MIT admits. All athletes and there are even more top schools. SJCHS is having an amazing year, but it’s primarily the athletes doing extraordinarily well. |
I believe last year, 2023 class, was the worst of the worst in terms of tough college admits or lack there of. This year appears, from the admits I have seen, to be little easier, but still hard. Overall, post covid meaning 2020-present has changed the college admissions landscape. Rumor has it 2026 has a birth number population drop so maybe things are beginning to normalize a bit? |
Which Ivy has ED1? |
+1 it’s a trend this cycle. It’s happening everywhere. I’m not sure if it’s related to the FSAF being so delayed and/or a function of schools waiting for higher stat applicants as lower stats have to shoot their wad early to look desirable at their reaches. |
Not at all. This year early admits are down (raw numbers) and applications are up significantly from last year. |
Penn |