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College and University Discussion
Reply to "is boarding school HS a hook for college?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Yes of course, it signals full pay.[/quote] Why would it need to "signal" anything? Need aware schools get all the finance info and the small number of need blind/meet full need schools don't consider.[/quote] Yes but full pay is more complicated than that. They are looking for other signals. Schools are looking for potential donors/ speakers/ networkers or ppl who will employ graduates. We are seeing how hard it is for grads to get jobs… Our college counselor said it was important for both parents to have updated LinkedIn with clear senior leadership/executive titles conveyed in job titles in common app. The signaling is very important for AO (many of who do look at LinkedIn after 1st pass). The $$$ privilege may not hurt at all at certain private colleges and can actually help. [/quote] Please name which schools look at these factors. Or is this the rumor mill?[/quote] It’s pretty easy to figure out if you parse through data…. Vanderbilt; Rice; Cornell; Dartmouth; WashU[/quote] Look at the % of admitted students in the top 1% of HHI (or better top 0.5% of HHI if they break it down that far). Vanderbilt; Dartmouth & WashU make sense. But isn’t this thread about advantages for boarding school students? Some boarding schools are feeders. Not shocking news.[/quote] Again you are saying "look at these numbers" without any direct evidence or even a logic chain. At best this is a "post hoc ergo propter hoc" fallacy. There is no evidence need blind schools make admissions decisions based on economics.[/quote] Wow. That Reddit link makes a crazy case for his income/wealth [i]subtly[/i] impact admissions decisions. “I also think that if there was any doubt beforehand, this further magnifies the questionable priorities that many of these institutions have. I was just at Yales admitted students days and I was surprised how it felt like one in every three or four people I met went to one of the big NE boarding schools...”[/quote] Sigh... no one doubts the stats show wealthy students are over-represented at elite schools. It's because they have every advantage and make better candidates independent of their ability to pay tuition. They are a self-selecting sample. The question is will an admissions officer at a need blind college admit one student over another because of the "signal" that they will be full pay. The answer remains "No".[/quote] The signal isn't that they may be full pay, it's that they may be a donor. Top NYC and LA privates get the same treatment for the same reason [/quote] So this is a different claim than the one made in the thread above. But it is also technically false since donor and potential donor admissions come through the development office.[/quote] lol That’s a ton of naïveté. [/quote] lol That's another BS claim with no evidence that implies you have special knowledge and the conspiracy is in full effect but you have cracked the code because you are special. You're a college admissions flat earther. Provide some evidence or we can debate who is more naïve. (ps it's you)[/quote] I didn’t make the donor claim, but I’m not sure what’s controversial here? Donors are given special status and one can assume potential donors (8 figures not 7) would also be given that status? Or celebrities, senior corporate leaders, or politicians? The thing that I think is wrong in this thread is that it’s not $$$ that matters to certain private colleges but it’s $$$$$. So if you are a random biglaw partner, the school does not care. If you are the head of a giant global company, or a celebrity, they care. For all those other reasons listed in other places here. And at boarding schools, I’d imagine it’s a lot of Wall Street, hedge fund, billionaire $$$. That counts and matters at certain private schools (prob not T5). A lawyer does not matter. Even if you make $2-3 million a year. Hope that makes sense?[/quote] No, it does not make sense, because that is not how it works. Donor admissions come through the development office. Admissions officers at need blind schools do not consider an applicant's ability to pay when making admissions decisions. There is no "signal", there is no code, there are no application secrets. It **IS** that simple.[/quote] Donor applicants: At some schools like Northwestern, yes. You are correct, no sep process/app secrets. At Penn and Dartmouth, absolutely not. I know first hand - there is someone who guides you through your initial campus tour from the Dev office and you notify them of the date and time of submitted admissions. It’s a parallel process. For Penn, you have to be in the top 1% of donations. Dartmouth is based on dollar amount and duration of commitment. There are a few other schools - but I won’t out them here. The way to find them: look for schools with the highest # of private school kids. Not many in T25 but a few stand out. I think some were mentioned earlier.[/quote]
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