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Reply to "Non profits started by high school students"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I think people have to be careful about drawing a straight like between starting a non-profit and getting into a top colleges. These kids probably have the academics, the letters of rec, etc. As someone said before, it's like going on a mission trip. It's now a think that UMC people do. [b]I seriously doubt an AO gets excited about non-profits to the extent that they're accepting kids who don't have the full package just because of one.[/b][/quote] No no no. You don't get it. These days many kids competing for Ivies and similar already have all the academic accolades they can possibly have. That's just buying you a ticket to the lottery. One of the plus factors, if you're not a recruited athlete, is to found a non-profit. This is to distinguish you from the rest of your magnet school classmates, who also have a perfect SAT scores, 5s on a dozen AP exams, and have also, like you, done multivariable calculus with differential equations in 10th grade and interned at the NIH and done at least a nice poster of original research at a major scientific conference, if not actually co-authored a paper. When all the stats at the same, the non-profit is the one "squishy" thing (squishy, as in it's difficult to know exactly how hard you worked for it) that can make you stand out. I speak from experience, regarding students at the Blair magnet in MCPS. I'm sure TJ students are in the same boat. Maybe private school students at Sidwell, St Albans and NCS have that special internship in a congressional office their parent pulled strings for, in addition to the non-profit, and don't have as much STEM background. To each his own flavor of squishy, but it's always in addition to excellent stats. [/quote] You're saying the same thing as the PP. The student with the non-profit has the same qualifications, they just have one more way to turn heads. Schools don't notice sit-on-your-butt.[/quote]
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