Still no. - parent of a Vanderbilt history major. |
We are not full pay (or hooked) and DD was admitted to a T10 in December. Not good to generalize. |
My kid got into Vanderbilt in RD and applied as a certain unpopular major. DC passed but I’d imagine the undersubscribed major played a role? Maybe not! |
Why is there a large athletic gap between your two sons? Or was your older one a daughter? Or different fathers? There is a gap in athleticism between those who make it pro and siblings who don’t but usually that separation doesn’t happen for going to college (cooper flagg’s brother plays in college for example). |
| Yes, if you are strategic and a good writer/story. Mine didnt, fwiw. |
Wouldn't that EC be a hook if no one else is doing it? |
No, people are using the word "hook" as a distinguishing trait, but that's not it. A hook is a recruited athlete, URM/FGLI, faculty kid, legacy, or development kid. Those are all of the actual hooks that put kids in a different pile. |
My point is that you don’t apply “to a major” at Vanderbilt. Or probably at most schools outside of engineering and maybe undergraduate business. |
- feeder school applicant - geographically desirable (rural, state they don’t have a student from yet) - kid of a famous or wealthy parent - kid who is very well known (been on tv a lot, massive social media following) |
Yes. You are a college applicant with an academic interest or major listed that is “considered” when your application is reviewed. https://www.saraharberson.com/blog/how-to-choose-a-major-college-applications “What I mean by that is that students who choose majors that support their academic and extracurricular activities present themselves in the best light. Because the vast majority of colleges consider a student's major choice in the admissions process, being thoughtful about what you select can be a difference maker.“ https://www.saraharberson.com/blog/determine-what-major-to-list-on-your-applications “Note, though, that I use the word "applicant" not "major" for a reason. Students don't typically declare their major until sophomore year of college. At most colleges, you are not bound to the major you list on the application. However, you are bound to the undergraduate school/program you were admitted to. For example, if you list a major within the liberal arts program at a university, you are bound to that liberal arts program unless you apply and get admitted as an internal transfer to another program, like the business or engineering school at the university. Students change their minds, though. There is inherent flexibility built into American higher education.” |
Are you kidding? I have two kids (same dad, same gender) one is athletic and one isn't. There is no great mystery there, sometimes apples fall off the tree in different directions. One is blond and the other is brunette, go figure. |
| My CS kid without a hook is sophomore at Rice. |
Yes, mine did |
| Unhooked, smart kids go well applying ED at Chicago & Cornell from our non-DMV private. |
*do well |