Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I worked at a big three for about 10 years. The median I would estimate, having seen data and had faculty meetings re:grading norms, is a b/b+. Students also tend to improve jr sr year when they have more choice in the courses they take. At the end of senior year it’s closer to a b+. Big 3s are hard and most kids are going to be more than fine academically in college. Of the bottom half, usually between 5-10% are academic disasters, most likely this is NOT your kid. 15-25% are middling around a low B and the rest float between a solid 3.0 and a 3.5.
Senior parent. Interesting and sounds about right to me. Big3 grading tends to be pretty hard. Nearly fell off my chair once when I saw the grading rubric for my DS in English. Outstanding = A, Very strong and comprehensive = B, Good but could use some improvement ==C. So medians are below that at many other schools fo sure.
I would fall off my chair if someone tried to pass that off as a rubric too. Surely you are getting an actual rubric for that kind of tuition?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid is graduating with something very close to a 3.8 from a "big 3" and had ZERO chance at Harvard, or any Ivy, despite many varsity letters, leadership in clubs, regional awards and summer employment.
Really? I would have thought your DC would have a modest shot, no? Not at Harvard, but a couple of the lower ranked Ivies perhaps?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid is graduating with something very close to a 3.8 from a "big 3" and had ZERO chance at Harvard, or any Ivy, despite many varsity letters, leadership in clubs, regional awards and summer employment.
Really? I would have thought your DC would have a modest shot, no? Not at Harvard, but a couple of the lower ranked Ivies perhaps?
Yeah. What was the problem? Maybe negative references or bombed interviews?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid is graduating with something very close to a 3.8 from a "big 3" and had ZERO chance at Harvard, or any Ivy, despite many varsity letters, leadership in clubs, regional awards and summer employment.
Really? I would have thought your DC would have a modest shot, no? Not at Harvard, but a couple of the lower ranked Ivies perhaps?
Anonymous wrote:My kid is graduating with something very close to a 3.8 from a "big 3" and had ZERO chance at Harvard, or any Ivy, despite many varsity letters, leadership in clubs, regional awards and summer employment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I worked at a big three for about 10 years. The median I would estimate, having seen data and had faculty meetings re:grading norms, is a b/b+. Students also tend to improve jr sr year when they have more choice in the courses they take. At the end of senior year it’s closer to a b+. Big 3s are hard and most kids are going to be more than fine academically in college. Of the bottom half, usually between 5-10% are academic disasters, most likely this is NOT your kid. 15-25% are middling around a low B and the rest float between a solid 3.0 and a 3.5.
Senior parent. Interesting and sounds about right to me. Big3 grading tends to be pretty hard. Nearly fell off my chair once when I saw the grading rubric for my DS in English. Outstanding = A, Very strong and comprehensive = B, Good but could use some improvement ==C. So medians are below that at many other schools fo sure.
Anonymous wrote:I worked at a big three for about 10 years. The median I would estimate, having seen data and had faculty meetings re:grading norms, is a b/b+. Students also tend to improve jr sr year when they have more choice in the courses they take. At the end of senior year it’s closer to a b+. Big 3s are hard and most kids are going to be more than fine academically in college. Of the bottom half, usually between 5-10% are academic disasters, most likely this is NOT your kid. 15-25% are middling around a low B and the rest float between a solid 3.0 and a 3.5.
Anonymous wrote:Junior is not going to Harvard, but he'll be fine.
Anonymous wrote:Junior is not going to Harvard, but he'll be fine.