ah, now you trying to catch me out. you could take up to 3 in a single day - think the kid took 3 at end of 9th and two more in junior - maybe one in fall/winter sophomore. Mix of math, science, humanities. Not my kid - know this from my own DC who is good friends/study partner and took one of the subject tests with the kid and the kid's mom. IDK the exact dates only my DC giving me updates, "So and so got another 800." as you can see from the kid's stats, pretty driven. there were a subset of kids at their school who went crazy on subject tests, especially as no APs offered at their school, and had tutors if the school curriculum had gaps. |
Congratulations to you. Unfortunately in my DC's immediate circle students who took most difficult math and science courses, most are deferred or rejected. Most of the students who got in EA are either URM or big connection. |
To my knowledge even more than 15 |
What school? |
Agree. At least one of my DC's good friends took most challenge courses (both math and science) and get almost all As got deferred. |
Depending which courses you take. If you take regular math/science, GPA 3.8 is not uncommon. |
Not true. |
Brown is extremely difficult to access. There are thousands of kids applying that are top 5 percent of class. They cannot admit them all. |
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Prior parent here who was there during the college counselor upheaval a few years ago. SFS does not tell any senior that an Ivy League school is a target school.There are a handful of students who have unrealistic expectations despite being told repeatedly in meetings, emails, and 1:1 appointments that elite schools (<20% acceptance) are considered a reach for any SFS student.
My DC took the most challenging curriculum and had fantastic grades, top test scores, APs etc. The college counselors individualize safety/target/reach schools and did not offer false hope. If anything they undershot the list for my child. They cannot force families to abide with their advice but do require the kids to apply to a few safety schools to avoid a complete shutout. |
Anyone who expects entry to Brown's tier of school, no matter which HS, is arrogant and foolish. Times have changed. |
+1. And you state the true reality. The DMV has a ton of well qualified kids applying to the top schools. So being URM or connected gives the boost in where Others are flat out rejected. |
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I went to Exeter in the 90s and despite having all As, was dissuaded from applying to too many Ivy and reach schools. My college counselor was clear that i wouldn't get in. But i wasnt not allowed to apply. I still applied wherever I wanted. My older brother had gone from an average public school to Stanford, but he had perfect SATs, and was a national merit seni finalist. I had good grades but didnt take the most challenging (stem) courses, wasnt an athlete or standout campus leader. I came from a barely upper middle class Asian family. I got waitlisted at Brown, but in at Penn, Michigan, Berkeley… i chose another school that was more exciting to me that was not as elite— nyu, where I was a merit scholar in the business school. Had fun, but ended up transferring my sophomore year.
Anyway, my kids now go to DCPS and wont likely go to private for high school. I actually wish we could afford it because it’s an excellent education. But it is no guarantee of acceptance by an ultra elite college. |
So, your Exeter college counselor was clearly wrong. You got into Penn. |
Can you share your DC's GPA, test scores, and where DC were accepted? TIA |
What race were all these deferred kids? |