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College and University Discussion
Reply to "Chill applications thread"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]DCUM where good ideas go to get mocked mercilessly and die...[/quote] Only at the hands of those wound ridiculously tight. This thread was clearly not for them. Let the rest of us have our fun![/quote] What fun would that be?[/quote] I can have a lot of fun with the $25K per year my kid got in merit aid for not being desperate to attend the reachiest reach that ever reached.[/quote] But everyone should have the experience of basing their future plans on getting into a school that costs $90k a year and rejects 96% of applicants. Or something. [/quote] People seem to be conflating letting their fill out their applications alone with applying to non selective schools, which are two different things.[/quote] The thread is about approaching college applications in a more relaxed manner. For some, that may mean having the kid take the lead on applications. For others, it means picking likely schools. For our family, it’s both. If I need to do her applications for her, is she really ready for this next step? If she doesn’t want to go to Yale or Brown, why should she apply? [/quote] 99% of the kids out there are just picking a couple of affordable schools with above-50% admit rates that they would be happy at. Maybe add a reach school or two. “Easier admit school” and “do it themselves” are related. Any reasonable 17 year old can figure out how to do the Common App for George Mason because it’s just basic grades, maybe SAT scores if they want, a teacher rec, and the common essay. Most UMC families in NOVA can afford it, dorms are optional and you can always commute to save money. It’s the kid looking at Brown who has the problem and needs help from an adult. Should they TO or superscore? What’s the right number of extracurriculars? What’s more impressive looking, Eagle Scout or a job? Should they start a nonprofit? Do they have a hook? Can they create a hook? Are they pointy enough? Is their rigor enough, can the counselor check off “most rigor”? Are 10 APs enough? That’s not even getting into financing this $350k project. [/quote]
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