Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly, your DD sounds like many of the smart kids I have known in the last 10 years. I think there are very few schools that she might find too "intellectual" (maybe MIT/Chicago/Williams) - that will be a much shorter list than ones she should consider. Instead of focusing on the social environment, I would consider other factors to guide your search (school size, location, etc.). I would really caution you about thinking she will get in almost everywhere, because that is not what is happening for even the most high stats students.
I have kids now out of college who I might have described like yours, except perhaps more into athletics, and they ended up at Ivy/NESCAC/CAA type schools.
Yep.
And it is much much tougher since Covid and test optional. Kids like this are getting rejected in droves. Acceptance rates are single digits in top 20s. Literally thousands of kids just like yours —and them throw in all the ones that aren’t submitting test scores.
Anonymous wrote:She’s not that gifted. My kids also scored 35 ACT and have straight As in APs/honors and they are extremely social kids. Two are total jocks too.
Anonymous wrote:Honestly, your DD sounds like many of the smart kids I have known in the last 10 years. I think there are very few schools that she might find too "intellectual" (maybe MIT/Chicago/Williams) - that will be a much shorter list than ones she should consider. Instead of focusing on the social environment, I would consider other factors to guide your search (school size, location, etc.). I would really caution you about thinking she will get in almost everywhere, because that is not what is happening for even the most high stats students.
I have kids now out of college who I might have described like yours, except perhaps more into athletics, and they ended up at Ivy/NESCAC/CAA type schools.
Anonymous wrote:Honestly, your DD sounds like many of the smart kids I have known in the last 10 years. I think there are very few schools that she might find too "intellectual" (maybe MIT/Chicago/Williams) - that will be a much shorter list than ones she should consider. Instead of focusing on the social environment, I would consider other factors to guide your search (school size, location, etc.). I would really caution you about thinking she will get in almost everywhere, because that is not what is happening for even the most high stats students.
I have kids now out of college who I might have described like yours, except perhaps more into athletics, and they ended up at Ivy/NESCAC/CAA type schools.
Anonymous wrote:my DD is very smart and a very hard worker- straight A's, 35 ACT Score, great extracurricular activities etc... but not really the intellectual type. She is a social butterfly, loves sports, would rather talk about tik tok or go shopping than read etc... Once you get to know her you can tell she is smart and interested in the world, but it isn't her surface level personality. She would rather be at a party than studying on any weekend night.
She should have no problem getting into most schools. I am thinking because of her personality she would be happiest at a school like Duke,or Vanderbilt that seems to have a lot of student-life balance. UVA may be too big.
Any insight? Anyone have any experience with a kid like this at an ivy league or smaller school? Trying to help her guide her college search, and she didn't love the idea of many of the options her school college counselor gave her, but does want to go to a top school.