Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m getting so tired of all these posts asking if they do XYZ, have a pointy EC blah blah blah, will their kid get into college? The way the US college application system is rigged, getting into a top school is basically a lottery. Don’t make your kids miserable telling them to do stuff to get into college. Don’t make college such a huge pot of gold at the end of the rainbow.
Kids should do the magnets if they want to learn the content that’s being taught in the magnet or if they need a challenge and a cohort of students similarly situated. Whether it’s worth it schlepping on a bus, having long days, hyper focusing on a subject matter, no one knows except your kid, OP.
If you are getting tired of it, then maybe stop reading it?
Anonymous wrote:Don’t do magnet for college admission purposes. Some kids need more. If your kid is one of those then yes. If not, go to home school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've always thought of magnets as NEGATIVES for college admission. Colleges compare you with others at the same school. No university wants to admit 50-100 from the same school, no matter how good the school.
Yes, more magnet kids get in to top schools, but that's because magnets have the best and brightest students in the county. If their admissions procedures are at all reasonable (and I think they are), then I would expect almost ALL magnet kids who apply to top colleges to get in. That doesn't happen.
OP here. Yes, agree. And yes, I realize that being in a magnet should be about the student needing that challenge, but for college admissions, it's clear being in a magnet can work against a high achieving student at a magnet.
Goodness OP, factors that go into admissions are a matrix. It isn't that simple. Sure, it CAN work against someone to be in a magnet if it means that grades, ECs, mental health, etc. suffer. But if they don't, it is generally an advantage. Though of course some would say that it is better to excel at a school that is likely to have less applicants to the target schools....
But if you are going to paint with an extremely broad brush, "it's clear" that being at a magnet is better than not being at a magnet.
I don't know.. as a PP stated, a student is competing with the same kids in the same school/program. A high achieving kid at a lower ranked HS would do better in college admissions than one in a higher ranked HS and being one of a dozen kids with similar stats.
Big fish, little pond and all that.
I'm not trying to discourage people from sending their kids to magnets. I'm just noticing that admissions for magnet students isn't what I thought they'd be. There's a discussion about this also in the AAP forum about TJ. That's what made me start to think about this.
Anonymous wrote:I’m getting so tired of all these posts asking if they do XYZ, have a pointy EC blah blah blah, will their kid get into college? The way the US college application system is rigged, getting into a top school is basically a lottery. Don’t make your kids miserable telling them to do stuff to get into college. Don’t make college such a huge pot of gold at the end of the rainbow.
Kids should do the magnets if they want to learn the content that’s being taught in the magnet or if they need a challenge and a cohort of students similarly situated. Whether it’s worth it schlepping on a bus, having long days, hyper focusing on a subject matter, no one knows except your kid, OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've always thought of magnets as NEGATIVES for college admission. Colleges compare you with others at the same school. No university wants to admit 50-100 from the same school, no matter how good the school.
Yes, more magnet kids get in to top schools, but that's because magnets have the best and brightest students in the county. If their admissions procedures are at all reasonable (and I think they are), then I would expect almost ALL magnet kids who apply to top colleges to get in. That doesn't happen.
OP here. Yes, agree. And yes, I realize that being in a magnet should be about the student needing that challenge, but for college admissions, it's clear being in a magnet can work against a high achieving student at a magnet.
Goodness OP, factors that go into admissions are a matrix. It isn't that simple. Sure, it CAN work against someone to be in a magnet if it means that grades, ECs, mental health, etc. suffer. But if they don't, it is generally an advantage. Though of course some would say that it is better to excel at a school that is likely to have less applicants to the target schools....
But if you are going to paint with an extremely broad brush, "it's clear" that being at a magnet is better than not being at a magnet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've always thought of magnets as NEGATIVES for college admission. Colleges compare you with others at the same school. No university wants to admit 50-100 from the same school, no matter how good the school.
Yes, more magnet kids get in to top schools, but that's because magnets have the best and brightest students in the county. If their admissions procedures are at all reasonable (and I think they are), then I would expect almost ALL magnet kids who apply to top colleges to get in. That doesn't happen.
OP here. Yes, agree. And yes, I realize that being in a magnet should be about the student needing that challenge, but for college admissions, it's clear being in a magnet can work against a high achieving student at a magnet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've always thought of magnets as NEGATIVES for college admission. Colleges compare you with others at the same school. No university wants to admit 50-100 from the same school, no matter how good the school.
Yes, more magnet kids get in to top schools, but that's because magnets have the best and brightest students in the county. If their admissions procedures are at all reasonable (and I think they are), then I would expect almost ALL magnet kids who apply to top colleges to get in. That doesn't happen.
OP here. Yes, agree. And yes, I realize that being in a magnet should be about the student needing that challenge, but for college admissions, it's clear being in a magnet can work against a high achieving student at a magnet.
Anonymous wrote:I've always thought of magnets as NEGATIVES for college admission. Colleges compare you with others at the same school. No university wants to admit 50-100 from the same school, no matter how good the school.
Yes, more magnet kids get in to top schools, but that's because magnets have the best and brightest students in the county. If their admissions procedures are at all reasonable (and I think they are), then I would expect almost ALL magnet kids who apply to top colleges to get in. That doesn't happen.