That doesn't really line up with the results posted on this thread. I'm a PP with a kid who was admitted OOS/business. Not a legacy. Stats are strong, but not as high as many kids who were deferred (reported sub-1400 SAT scores, 4.3-ish GPA with a healthy number of APs). ECs, LORs, and essay are all very strong. I just don't think my kid got in on test scores and GPA alone. |
And no, DC is not hooked. |
After all this waiting, she finally logged on and told me that the status is showing "awaiting decision"! She accidentally applied regular decision! Ugh! On the other hand, she did check the portal for South Carolina and got in with $90k in state tuition and scholarships. |
It does line up with our experience, highest ranked kids at our high schools got in. Perhaps your kid’s school doesn’t have as much grade deflation as others, or they wanted someone from your geographical location? |
Meant grade inflation, not deflation. |
It’s garbage. warmer weather states post about all the fun they have on social media free advertisement self-fulfilling prophesy some popular-queen bee type girls applied made it a “hot” school College admissions is more competitive. An academically strong group of kids were just admitted to Clemson. Some may do so as a real possible school and some May as a safety. |
There are a lot of reasons kids are increasingly applying to southern schools, including Clemson. Saying it is because of queen bees on tik tok does not take into account what has been going on the past 4-5 years. The schools do have better weather but also tend to offer better merit/financial aid. They have a lot of school spirit. They are not nearly as a political as some of these northeastern schools. Not every student wants to be a social just warrior. There are some that rather go to a tailgate and football game as opposed to exchanging insults and disparagements at a student demonstration. |
Agreed 100%. But I think the financial part plays a HUGE roll as well. As colleges are simply unaffordable to many families, strong students are finding that they need to go where the money is (even if they got into some of the prestigious northeast schools). Even families that saved $ for their kids' schooling are finding the finances difficult since saving 100s of thousands is very difficult for most people to do (unless you were making great money from the very beginning with no financial catastrophes/set backs in the interim). Anyone who has not done so should watch the documentary on Amazon Prime - Borrowed Future. |
It’s an amazing experience. You get a good education while you can experience world class athletics and lots of school spirit and hype. Nice weather, top facilities, famous athletes and celebrity kids on campus (Mark Wahlberg’s daughter is a freshman at Clemson, Suni Lee at Auburn, Arch Manning at UT-Austin, LSU, UF, and UK have a number of Olympic athletes on campus, etc). World famous CEOs, such as Tim Cook (Auburn/Apple) and Chris Malachowsky (UF/Nvidia) attend home football games and donate many millions of dollars to their respective alma maters to support academic programs, Cook (Engineering) and Malachowsky (AI Research)… |
Great post. I might add that it sounds great that there are famous superstar professors at the top 20 universities, but even if they do teach an occasional undergrad course, their expertise is overkill for undergrads. You don’t need a Nobel laureate to teach you undergrad chemistry. |