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Reply to "WSJ article on your child's chances of getting into an IVY are slim"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Three paragraphs summarily explain her rejections. Twenty years ago, she wouldn't have applied to these top-tier colleges and accumulated a hoard of rejections. Twenty years ago, she would have been happy to matriculate at UT or ASU. 1. Ms. Younger wrote in the applications about her history of depression and anxiety to explain the two B’s she earned during her sophomore year. 2. Ms. Younger’s father attended the University of Oklahoma and her mother went to Montclair State University in New Jersey. She has no connection to the faculty or alumni at any elite school, nor did she hire a test-preparation coach or a private college counselor. 3. Her school serves McKinney, Texas, a fast-growing suburb 30 miles outside of Dallas. In a given year, about half of the school’s graduates enroll at four-year colleges; most attend public universities in Texas, Dr. Cranmore said. He recalls two McKinney graduates enrolling at Yale and one at Princeton over the past decade.[/quote] So she should have known her place. Got it. [/quote] Oh, grow up. Community theatre, school accounting club, a [b]meaningless part time job [/b]and stats that were extremely common in their applicant pools was never going to get her into an Ivy. Delusional.[/quote] All that is theoretically supposed to matter is what you do in the context of your high school. 99% high schoolers have no access to “internships” or research experience. The bolded is interesting. I’m not saying this is her situation, but a lot of kids that have to work a job in high school do not have time to do what you consider meaningful extracurriculars.[/quote] Meaningful extracurriculars are mostly bogus fake altruism and completely fabricated. Recall the Penn scammer said she “founded” a nonprofit and the step mom said that was a lie, she came to literally one event. I’m far more impressed by a teen who worked a couple years at McDonalds or a grocery store than a workshy scammer who fabricated some humanitarian narrative. [/quote] Working fast food should count for a lot. It's a miserable job that required you to suck it up and deal. Unfortunately, creating a 501(c)(3) is just a matter of paperwork [/quote]
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