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College and University Discussion
Reply to "Which colleges have majority student body of very bright kids but not brainiacs? "
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I think you are assigning value to the SAT that isn’t true. Lots of brainiacs at many schools. I don’t think you can tell the difference between a kid scoring a 1540 and 1400 if you meet them on the street. [/quote] OP here. Please no flame, but at our school, DD and 2 close friends who are similarly smart but not genius types scored 1530-1540 first try, minimal prep. While a true brainiac kid who has been brilliant since 1st grade scored 1600 first try, no one was surprised. Other friends told us their kids scored in the 1300s and need tutors to get up to 1450-ish. Those are the kids who always needed tutors and consistently performed a band under the 1540 kids (bc the school have different tracks for core subjects since middle school) and def under the 1600 kid. We have known all these kids since K and it's been very consistent. I disagree you can't tell the difference between a 1540 and 1400 kid, just as I can tell the difference between my 1540 kid and the 1600 kid. I have also seen kids who were happy in normal courses and got pushed by parents to get tutored into the advanced track math and chem classes and ended up having to drop back down to non-advanced track the following year. I truly think kids do well in the track they naturally excel in but all have a chance to be very successful when they grow up if they learned in an environment where learn with peers with similar aptitudes and build confidence. [/quote] I think you have a narrow definition of "very bright kids". I know you aren't a troll but you act like one. My DD consistently scored 1420-1440 (not superscoring) on the SAT, so not very bright by your definition. But consistently scores in the 95% and above in the NWEA MAP scores, is also in the most difficult IB STEM classes at her school and is thriving, could probably take even more challenging classes and love them and will easily be in the top 10% of her class. Loves history and politics as well and has interesting ECs and leadership positions in her high school job. If you think she can't keep up in conversations with kids who have 1540 and above, you are mistaken. She is not a brainiac and that's okay, but she is "very bright" by every definition - a 1440 is 95% in SAT - and engaging. She had maybe 4-5 more SAT questions incorrect than your kid; that hardly makes your kid "very bright" but she isn't. I think you are pretty clueless on what makes a kid very bright. And I don't care if she is "just bright" vs. "very bright" vs a brainiac. [/quote]
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