not OP but I will chime in -- top privates do not have AP courses. They follow their own curriculum, which (they claim) is more rigorous than AP. |
I was wondering about that too. I think it probably means 15% of the class have 4.0 GPA? This would be unusual at a top private, but OP said the school is a tier down. |
| Look into Carleton |
| OP here. His school still follows the AP curriculum but also offers post AP classes. He would have taken 12 APs and 2 post APs in math by the time he graduates. School calculates GPA on a scale of 100, but he has the equivalent of a 4.0 unweighted ( mostly A+s in all classes ). Intended major would be along the lines of economics/ finance / accounting . |
I think Carleton would be a great fit for OP. But I sense that she may be more interested in a higher ranked non-lac school. |
Carleton is a t1 lac and the best teaching college in the country. |
Not be beat a dead horse, but if Econ is the intended major, ED Chicago. |
Agree. 💯 |
Absolutely they will. |
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The vast, vast majority of high schoolers haven’t done any “research” with professors (the majority of undergrads haven’t!), so don’t worry about that.
What is the intended major? Or, at least, is it humanities? Sciences? Social sciences? Something pre-professional? Engineering? I don’t think I’ve seen many (if any) in this thread use the phrase “demonstrated interest”, but that could be a good term to understand, OP. That could make a difference for some of the schools your student might be looking at. It’ll be noted in a table in each school’s Common Data Set (which you can get by googling “{schoolname} CDS”). |
| (^ Same poster; Ah, just saw “Intended major would be along the lines of economics/ finance / accounting”) |
| IEC here. OP, your kid has a great chance at top 20s and certainly top 30s. |
Same here. OP sounds like your kid is in this zone. Also top SLACs |
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Similarish-DC got into a great state school and is psyched to be attending. If you don't mind paying out-of-state tuition, you will have a lot of incredible state schools to choose from.
Based on my experience, your application strategy is going to make a big difference. You may be a lock for a UChicago ED round, and have literally no chance whatsoever RD, for example. It's this (unfortunate, stupid) strategic element where a private counselor could really help you at tis stage Econ, finance, and accounting are all very different majors! |
Has he taken AP tests? In what subjects? |