OP: they really don’t. Only a handful of kids get A in a class for each subject. No one has graduated with a 4.0 in past 5 years. I would call that no grade inflation when no many schools have half the grade with 4.0. |
| As a previous poster said, Wesleyan is a great option. Really nice community of inclusive, interesting, sharply intelligent students, and there is no "type". Very strong in STEM. Also a nice size for a SLAC, bigger than most = more social opportunities, livelier campus. |
For safeties, consider BC, Wake, Richmond. |
So? It’s a reach anyway. |
SO WHAT!!!! My kid at private has a 3.9 unweighted and a lower SAT score (likely, based on practice tests) than OP’s kid. So is the 3.8 weighted or unweighted? It makes a difference, whether coming from private or not. |
Brown, no. VA publics, yes. |
She already answered this question on uw vs w. |
Richmond EA is a good safety. The OP's kid will likely get a lot of merit too. |
Colby is 100% a safety for this kid from a strong private. They will take down to a 3.4 or so from ours. My kid was one of them this year. |
Colby takes the lower 1/3 of our private too. |
And almost no one from our W public. Ditto Middlebury. |
Im sure. Its why all of these comparisons are pointless. |
Oh brother. None of these are safeties in RD. They all have some yield protection tendencies. Yes, the stats make the student a very strong candidate but that does not equate to easy admission. Rejections in these scenarios happen all the time. |
Richmond doesn’t give that much merit. |
How many were ED? How do you think Colby maintains that low admit rate? They don’t produce a CDS but I suspect they are heavy in ED and savage in RD. |