+1 Other PP here - yup, they do not want higher stats than about what you listed, likely due to yield protection (UVA knows those applicants will choose a different school, ultimately - not UVA). |
Doubtful. |
+1 The example I’ve heard during the Instagram sessions is the person who spreads the APs out across the core does better than someone with the same number of APs who misses taking one in a subject or two. |
The Naviance scattergram for our FCPS high school disagrees. The very tippy top students (e.g. 1600 SAT scores) are not getting rejected by UVA. |
PP here. We obviously attend different high schools - because it is the opposite for us. |
How do you know that they had good essays and LORs? Are you an admission screener for UVA? |
We’ll see. |
Exactly,the student is compared to classmates in their own high school. |
| I think the people who cry “yield protection!” just don’t understand how competitive these schools have gotten or that their kid is one of many strong applicants. UVA doesn’t have to play the yield game. Top students, especially instate, choose to attend. |
UVA is very clear they want to see the most rigorous courses that the high school offers taken. |
|
But entirely understandable in light of the cost benefits for in-state students. A lot of parents, self included, were slammed in March 2020 financially (the Covid meltdown in the market) and now the new meltdown in the market. Where we might have saved enough for private higher ed institutions, those accounts were decimated now twice. And we have multiple kids to put through college. Public institutions now make the most sense and are a great value. |
SCHEV. Virginia's public office for providing stats for higher ed in the Commonwealth. |
To the best of my knowledge, UVA does not engage in yield protection (like Virginia Tech does). Please cite something to show me wrong. |
This. The very top students are still getting in. UVA doesn't do yield protection |