There is absolutely no way that you know that (bolded) for a fact. Maybe they DID try to dissuade 13 out of those 15 from applying ED - or at least said, OK, you're call, but understand it's a real long shot. But in typical fashion, everyone assumes themselves to the exception to the rule. |
| sorry, "your" call |
| Bringing this back to the basics: Does any one know what the outcomes for the year are? How did students do overall? |
The bolded is absolute bullshit. Any upper school parent reading this, please disregard if your kid's intention isn't STEM research or a top 5 engineering program. e.g., if your kid signals to a T15 school that their current goal (at age 17) is arts and sciences. My Sidwell senior and several of his friends are off to T15 schools next year -- from the regular math and science track and not > 1560. Another group of his friends are also off to Ivies and a few T15 schools (which I can't name because I'd identify them) with the Math III but lower SATs than you indicate and not powerhouse research. Bottom line, if your Sidwell teen wants to study philosophy or econ or international relations at Northwestern or Yale or Duke or Chicago or Penn or Cornell or Vanderbilt ... PP's assertions are exaggeration. Can't speak to the kids who want to pursue chemical engineering at Stanford -- but a sizable group doesn't want this and does very well without hitting PP's benchmarks. |
Absolutely. Thousands of students thought they were ED candidates from all manner of high schools. There read nothing unique about this situation to this particular high school. Almost every one gets rejected and knows that going in but thinks they have a shot or they would not bother to apply. |
MCPS =/= Sidwell. |
Yes, that's what makes the process so much easier - as long as you've taken the necessary tests. All you have to do is have a strong academic record and be prepared to talk about your interest in the field you plan to pursue. (DC got to the interview round at Oxford and withdrew after getting into a US school ED.) |
+1 although not impressed by school's COO, Nobody is stopped from applying to any school. |
But if they were dissuaded and did not apply, they will always think they might have a chance. |
Is Wisconsin a safety for 3.6 UW MCPS? |
Not at all!!! |
| The college counselors make like 85k total per year - and have how many juniors and seniors to work with? They aren’t a college counselor getting 12k per kid! I think parents also need to be reasonable about their expectations. They are employees paid a relatively low wage in DC and are doing fine. The college admission game has changed and these top schools no longer can get their overly well qualified students all into t20 schools. Test optional screwed a lot of kids, colleges looking for more diversity of all types also does not play well for the majority of sidwell parents. What the college counselors need to tell full pay unhooked parents is your kid won’t get into an Ivy or top 20 because of this, you should ED at a target school you’d be happy at so you have a real chance. |
The issue is Sidwell and MIT specific. MIT highly correlates class rank. Sidwell doesn't do class rank. Ergo, any application from Sidwell to MIT is going to be at a disadvantage. Also (I am not going back to that example to look) my recollection is that the prospective applicant's record was not up to the normal MIT standards. Thus, a high high reach to the point that it isn't worth wasting the applicaiton fee. That doesn't mean the school wouldn't support the application or withhold a transcript. |
There is no proof of this whatsoever, and, you are suggesting the school disclose what it writes both about your student and other students? Are you mad? |
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As a former SFS parent, I agree that it's ridiculous to try to tell parents it doesn't matter where your kid goes to school. Depending on the field a student wants to pursue, it can be helpful to go to a T20 university, plus, after a very rigorous high school experience, most parents will want their kids to go to challenging university. That doesn't mean Ivies or even T20s.
I think Lauren does a really good job --she knows how to best present applicants -- but she can't work miracles. In the past few years there has been a shift toward rural, first generation, URM applicants, especially at the very top schools. There are plenty of excellent schools though, and my sense is that most SFS grads are getting into them. And once they get in, they do very well. I think SFS does a great job in preparing students for college. |