Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you kidding me? Who thinks like this? You study abroad to learn a language and/or broaden your horizons, not to strengthen some college app. Sheesh.
Especially ludicrous is the conviction that we've gotten inside the heads of AOs and we know that they reject such programs.
Yeah that would be ludicrous. Except who is doing that exactly? Some people have talked to AOs, or to consultants who make their living talking to AOs, or - wait for it - read one of the dozens of books written by former AOs... not exactly metaphysics, just read a book.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you kidding me? Who thinks like this? You study abroad to learn a language and/or broaden your horizons, not to strengthen some college app. Sheesh.
Especially ludicrous is the conviction that we've gotten inside the heads of AOs and we know that they reject such programs.
Anonymous wrote:Are you kidding me? Who thinks like this? You study abroad to learn a language and/or broaden your horizons, not to strengthen some college app. Sheesh.
Anonymous wrote:It’s pretty well established now that expensive summer programs for high schoolers on U.S. college campuses are largely (not always) dismissed by AOs as pay to play. Let’s just accept that for purposes of this discussion as it’s been discussed in other threads. What about a summer or semester as an exchange student abroad? Whether it’s a language school or living with a host family. Clearly colleges promote these programs for their own students. Any idea how AOs evaluate this in high schoolers?
Anonymous wrote:I think it depends on a lot of factors. Years ago I spent my junior year of high school in France and it was a great experience that I don’t regret one bit but I do think it probably hurt my college application process a bit. When my college apps went in I was a year behind my peers in terms of transcript and “ rigor” and all EC stuff stopped at end of sophomore year. My year abroad was with AFS which is respected but I don’t think acceptance is all that competitive. OTOH my dd got a competitive state department scholarship to spend her senior year abroad so her apps were much more robust because she had a full 3 years of classes+ECs, she was in a unusual part of world, and just getting the scholarship was a bit of an accomplishment. So in her case I’m sure it helped her. We were both strong high school students applying to competitive colleges. I didn’t get in but she did. Still, as above poster mentioned, don’t make a decision about a year of life based on college stuff. Do it or don’t do it for all if the other reasons that spending a year abroad can be great, hard, and life changing.
Anonymous wrote:Are you kidding me? Who thinks like this? You study abroad to learn a language and/or broaden your horizons, not to strengthen some college app. Sheesh.