Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Aside from high grades and SAT scores, what can a student do to stand out when applying to top CS programs?
No idea. My kid had multiple internships, even one paid, a few competition wins and was deferred from Ga Tech and Northeastern and flat out rejected from UIUC. Very high stats and highest course rigor.
Any luck at UMD?
DP.. my kid got rejected to both UIUC and GA Tech, accepted to UMD honors for CS.
Deferred at MIT and UMich.
Very high stats.
Very strange college admissions world.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Aside from high grades and SAT scores, what can a student do to stand out when applying to top CS programs?
No idea. My kid had multiple internships, even one paid, a few competition wins and was deferred from Ga Tech and Northeastern and flat out rejected from UIUC. Very high stats and highest course rigor.
Any luck at UMD?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Aside from high grades and SAT scores, what can a student do to stand out when applying to top CS programs?
It is incredibly competitive, so apply to lot of colleges including multiple safeties. CS can make your safeties look like reach schools.
EA to as many public schools as possible (GATech, UIUC, Purdue, UT, UMD, Wisconsin etc).
These are my sons stats - UW 4.0, SAT 1560, 12 AP's including APCSA, Physics-1, Calc BC, APUSH etc, multiple self-directed coding projects, multiple hackathons, USACO silver level, speech captain at school, multiple speech finalist etc.
He got accepted for CS at UMDCP, got alternate major at UIUC, got multiple UC's, rejected by GATech, Stanford, UT, and deferred by a few others.
So CS is a crapshoot regardless of the EC's, grades and SAT.
So apply broadly and keep your fingers crossed.
UC results are out ?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Aside from high grades and SAT scores, what can a student do to stand out when applying to top CS programs?
It is incredibly competitive, so apply to lot of colleges including multiple safeties. CS can make your safeties look like reach schools.
EA to as many public schools as possible (GATech, UIUC, Purdue, UT, UMD, Wisconsin etc).
These are my sons stats - UW 4.0, SAT 1560, 12 AP's including APCSA, Physics-1, Calc BC, APUSH etc, multiple self-directed coding projects, multiple hackathons, USACO silver level, speech captain at school, multiple speech finalist etc.
He got accepted for CS at UMDCP, got alternate major at UIUC, got multiple UC's, rejected by GATech, Stanford, UT, and deferred by a few others.
So CS is a crapshoot regardless of the EC's, grades and SAT.
So apply broadly and keep your fingers crossed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Aside from high grades and SAT scores, what can a student do to stand out when applying to top CS programs?
It is incredibly competitive, so apply to lot of colleges including multiple safeties. CS can make your safeties look like reach schools.
EA to as many public schools as possible (GATech, UIUC, Purdue, UT, UMD, Wisconsin etc).
These are my sons stats - UW 4.0, SAT 1560, 12 AP's including APCSA, Physics-1, Calc BC, APUSH etc, multiple self-directed coding projects, multiple hackathons, USACO silver level, speech captain at school, multiple speech finalist etc.
He got accepted for CS at UMDCP, got alternate major at UIUC, got multiple UC's, rejected by GATech, Stanford, UT, and deferred by a few others.
So CS is a crapshoot regardless of the EC's, grades and SAT.
So apply broadly and keep your fingers crossed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Aside from high grades and SAT scores, what can a student do to stand out when applying to top CS programs?
No idea. My kid had multiple internships, even one paid, a few competition wins and was deferred from Ga Tech and Northeastern and flat out rejected from UIUC. Very high stats and highest course rigor.
Any luck at UMD?
Anonymous wrote:Aside from high grades and SAT scores, what can a student do to stand out when applying to top CS programs?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Aside from high grades and SAT scores, what can a student do to stand out when applying to top CS programs?
No idea. My kid had multiple internships, even one paid, a few competition wins and was deferred from Ga Tech and Northeastern and flat out rejected from UIUC. Very high stats and highest course rigor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Aside from high grades and SAT scores, what can a student do to stand out when applying to top CS programs?
No idea. My kid had multiple internships, even one paid, a few competition wins and was deferred from Ga Tech and Northeastern and flat out rejected from UIUC. Very high stats and highest course rigor.
Anonymous wrote:Aside from high grades and SAT scores, what can a student do to stand out when applying to top CS programs?
Anonymous wrote:Coding on their own.
Projects they did.
Languages they already know to code in.
Most CS programs are strictly data schools with strong SAT/ACT/GPA.
Ignore DCUM that your kid needs a ton of extras they do not.