Anonymous wrote:Where do straight A students go these days? My Senior has straight As and I don't think his list is much different than his friends that have some Bs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where do straight A students go these days? My Senior has straight As and I don't think his list is much different than his friends that have some Bs.
This is the challenge. The straight-A students are still a big reach for the higher ranked schools and/or can't afford them so their lists will not be that different.
DD was an A/B average and wanted to go to a LAC. Our budget would only go up to about a W&M price. She applied there + a range of LACs. If she'd been an all-As student it likely would have been the same list but with W&M as a much more solid option (she was waitlisted). Going up higher in rankings gets you more selective LACs but at an out-of-budget price. I think the only ones that might have added are places like Grinnell, Carleton that give some merit but she really didn't want midwest so then we're back to the same list we had.
This is our kid. What LACs did she end up getting merit money from if you don't mind?
Got merit to fit our budget at SMCM, UMW, Allegheny, Washington College, Juniata, Susquehanna. Accepted but not enough merit at Dickinson.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where do straight A students go these days? My Senior has straight As and I don't think his list is much different than his friends that have some Bs.
This is the challenge. The straight-A students are still a big reach for the higher ranked schools and/or can't afford them so their lists will not be that different.
DD was an A/B average and wanted to go to a LAC. Our budget would only go up to about a W&M price. She applied there + a range of LACs. If she'd been an all-As student it likely would have been the same list but with W&M as a much more solid option (she was waitlisted). Going up higher in rankings gets you more selective LACs but at an out-of-budget price. I think the only ones that might have added are places like Grinnell, Carleton that give some merit but she really didn't want midwest so then we're back to the same list we had.
This is our kid. What LACs did she end up getting merit money from if you don't mind?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where do straight A students go these days? My Senior has straight As and I don't think his list is much different than his friends that have some Bs.
This is the challenge. The straight-A students are still a big reach for the higher ranked schools and/or can't afford them so their lists will not be that different.
DD was an A/B average and wanted to go to a LAC. Our budget would only go up to about a W&M price. She applied there + a range of LACs. If she'd been an all-As student it likely would have been the same list but with W&M as a much more solid option (she was waitlisted). Going up higher in rankings gets you more selective LACs but at an out-of-budget price. I think the only ones that might have added are places like Grinnell, Carleton that give some merit but she really didn't want midwest so then we're back to the same list we had.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Plenty of schools for everyone. Look at schools outside the top 50 and state schools like Indiana and West Virginia with high acceptance rates.
+1 my A/B students are at Virginia Tech (not engineering) and a <50 ranked LAC
Do they felt like they don't belong at Virginia Tech? Just curious.
No, very happy there. And a better student than in HS, partly greater maturity, partly being able to focus on what he likes. He's a data analytics major/math minor and TAs for a math professor. HS Bs were generally in humanities classes and he takes the bare minimum of those for general ed requirements.
He has a bunch of HS friends at VT and none of them were the very top students in HS, good students but not stellar. Took some AP classes but not all of them.
Thanks for the thoughtful answer. I have a non-engineering kid interested in engineering schools, so this helps.
Anonymous wrote:Where do straight A students go these days? My Senior has straight As and I don't think his list is much different than his friends that have some Bs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Plenty of schools for everyone. Look at schools outside the top 50 and state schools like Indiana and West Virginia with high acceptance rates.
+1 my A/B students are at Virginia Tech (not engineering) and a <50 ranked LAC
Do they felt like they don't belong at Virginia Tech? Just curious.
No, very happy there. And a better student than in HS, partly greater maturity, partly being able to focus on what he likes. He's a data analytics major/math minor and TAs for a math professor. HS Bs were generally in humanities classes and he takes the bare minimum of those for general ed requirements.
He has a bunch of HS friends at VT and none of them were the very top students in HS, good students but not stellar. Took some AP classes but not all of them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Plenty of schools for everyone. Look at schools outside the top 50 and state schools like Indiana and West Virginia with high acceptance rates.
+1 my A/B students are at Virginia Tech (not engineering) and a <50 ranked LAC
Do they felt like they don't belong at Virginia Tech? Just curious.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Plenty of schools for everyone. Look at schools outside the top 50 and state schools like Indiana and West Virginia with high acceptance rates.
+1 my A/B students are at Virginia Tech (not engineering) and a <50 ranked LAC
Anonymous wrote:Plenty of schools for everyone. Look at schools outside the top 50 and state schools like Indiana and West Virginia with high acceptance rates.