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College and University Discussion
Reply to "Go to the school that wants you"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Anyone else love this? My DD received some pretty good merit money from 2 schools but was waitlisted at another that was near the top of her list. The waitlist school required supplemental materials, but when my DD saw that she was like “forget that! I don’t want to go there that badly!” I was like this too when I was applying (ages ago), and [b]I’m glad my DD felt that way that on her own, rather than start writing letters of interest and sending supplemental info, and then still have the chance to be rejected. [/b]Seems like you’re begging a school to take you, when they don’t seem terribly interested. [/quote] I guess, but your perspective is very me-centric. With any college, it's about building a class, not being "wanted." Perspective just feels slightly off to me. If more info might help the college better determine if the student is the best addition, great. If student is now more excited about another school or out of steam? Fine. But, it's not some unrequited love or jilted lover relationship. [/quote] Learning to handle rejection is a really important life skill. It's hard to grow, overcome challenges, and reach difficult goals if your greater priority is to avoid rejection or failure. [/quote] Agree staying in any competition is about resilience character and perspective. [b]But college admissions is a lot like life, there are many who when the going gets tough, take themselves out of the game[/b].[/quote] This is total BS. Should everyone have to apply to Harvard, because by not applying to Harvard, they're "taking themselves out of the game"? [b]Is the kid who wants to go to his state school and applies and gets in not playing the game because they didn't "shoot higher"? [/b] [/quote] Yes.[/quote] How ridiculous. - parent of a child who "settled" for his top choice[/quote]
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