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College and University Discussion
Reply to "Any high school teachers here who can give some frank talk about which types of students get into the top colleges?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I’ve been teaching AP for many, many years. Most of my students are the 4.0 unweighted GPA types. They volunteer, are varsity athletes, and they are doing all they can to look good for college. Some truly stand out, but most are very strong candidates. And then college admissions come and the results appear random. The true stand-outs face surprising rejections and the “just” strong candidate got in instead. Here’s what I think: students have to meet a threshold to make it into the “considered” pile at a college. But after making it into that pile, the choice itself appears random. All the kids can really do is get themselves into the pile. Then cross fingers and hope for the best. [/quote] I think you are accurate all the way until your point about the threshold to be considered pile. After that, it is not random though it may look that way to the outside. The decisions are based on things like.: - Major (classics gets in over bio; gender studies over engineering; English over CS) - Talent/ability (National award winning squash player gets in over varsity baseball captain; neither recruited. National ranked figure skater gets on over state champion soccer player; neither recruited) - essays (what kids reveal in essays matters a lot more than people think.) There is a right way to do essays in the wrong way to do essays. Unfortunately, most HS English teachers advise kids to do the wrong thing. It’s not about overcomplicated sentence and essay structures. The writing should be at easy to read/grasp level; varied sentences, including some very short sentences; poignant, personal, and touching on at least 3-4 of your personal values. It should also not repeat anything covered anywhere else in the application, including your major. - [b]LOR (an exceptional LOR can make a difference)[/b] Look at the T10 scoring rubrics. You can see why certain kids get in once you understand the scoring. [/quote] What makes a LOR “exceptional”?[/quote]
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