Anonymous wrote:My kid is a junior and is adamant that schools must have the following:
No snow/No cold temps (can get cold for short periods but nothing where it is in 30's for months at a time)
Must have football and strong school spirit
Must be >10,000 students
This basically translates to big state flagships in the SEC, Texas, AZ, etc.
I am trying to explain to him that as an OOS student with a weighted GPA of 3.9 and mediocre test scores, he really needs to cast a wide net. If he were willing to consider other geographical regions, or forgoing the football, or consider smaller schools, he could increase his chances. He is standing his ground. In the end whatever happens happens, but it is hard sitting back and thinking there is a possibility he doesn't;t get in anywhere. I truly do not think he sees that as a reality.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your kid will get into most of the schools in his mind's eye:
Clemson, Georgia, Tennessee, Kentucky or any of the confederate states.
Probably not UT-Austin or Vanderbilt.
With those stats, a student can omit UGA and Clemson from your "confederate"state schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid is a junior and is adamant that schools must have the following:
No snow/No cold temps (can get cold for short periods but nothing where it is in 30's for months at a time)
Must have football and strong school spirit
Must be >10,000 students
This basically translates to big state flagships in the SEC, Texas, AZ, etc.
I am trying to explain to him that as an OOS student with a weighted GPA of 3.9 and mediocre test scores, he really needs to cast a wide net. If he were willing to consider other geographical regions, or forgoing the football, or consider smaller schools, he could increase his chances. He is standing his ground. In the end whatever happens happens, but it is hard sitting back and thinking there is a possibility he doesn't;t get in anywhere. I truly do not think he sees that as a reality.
You are fortunate to have a son who knows what he wants and what he wants is realistic.
Anonymous wrote:Your kid will get into most of the schools in his mind's eye:
Clemson, Georgia, Tennessee, Kentucky or any of the confederate states.
Probably not UT-Austin or Vanderbilt.
state schools. Anonymous wrote:My kid is a junior and is adamant that schools must have the following:
No snow/No cold temps (can get cold for short periods but nothing where it is in 30's for months at a time)
Must have football and strong school spirit
Must be >10,000 students
This basically translates to big state flagships in the SEC, Texas, AZ, etc.
I am trying to explain to him that as an OOS student with a weighted GPA of 3.9 and mediocre test scores, he really needs to cast a wide net. If he were willing to consider other geographical regions, or forgoing the football, or consider smaller schools, he could increase his chances. He is standing his ground. In the end whatever happens happens, but it is hard sitting back and thinking there is a possibility he doesn't;t get in anywhere. I truly do not think he sees that as a reality.