Anonymous wrote:Northwestern’s National High School Institute is competitive. Limited to rising HS seniors - my daughter did theatre and they also have journalism. You need to apply and interview, and only about half are accepted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our college office asks students to avoid any pay to play summer programs.
Does a high school summer short study abroad program count as pay to play? Is it just the potential bad optics of looking rich?
We hoped our kid would get a lot out of his educational trip to Europe. At one point he seemed interested in international affairs as a major. He did not go on his high school sponsored pure vacation trip because it repeated places he's already seen.
In general, he felt surrounded by spoiled resume-builders and party-harders, but he liked the classes and field trips. It was two lines on the Common App in the end. He didn't feel comfortable mining it for essays because it was just 3 weeks long and he had other things to talk about. On balance we think it was worth it, but partially as a preview of people he might expect to meet at college. His top choice was just a flyover safety school to them. Very eye-opening.
Yes, anything that has a tuition. My kids are at a NE boarding school and plenty of their peers do this kind of summer program but the counselors recommend they leave them off of their applications.
So do they tell prep school kids to get jobs at fast-food restaurants, lifeguarding, and amusement parks, lol....what are they supposed to with summers? Self-study for AP tests?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our college office asks students to avoid any pay to play summer programs.
Does a high school summer short study abroad program count as pay to play? Is it just the potential bad optics of looking rich?
We hoped our kid would get a lot out of his educational trip to Europe. At one point he seemed interested in international affairs as a major. He did not go on his high school sponsored pure vacation trip because it repeated places he's already seen.
In general, he felt surrounded by spoiled resume-builders and party-harders, but he liked the classes and field trips. It was two lines on the Common App in the end. He didn't feel comfortable mining it for essays because it was just 3 weeks long and he had other things to talk about. On balance we think it was worth it, but partially as a preview of people he might expect to meet at college. His top choice was just a flyover safety school to them. Very eye-opening.
Yes, anything that has a tuition. My kids are at a NE boarding school and plenty of their peers do this kind of summer program but the counselors recommend they leave them off of their applications.
So do they tell prep school kids to get jobs at fast-food restaurants, lifeguarding, and amusement parks, lol....what are they supposed to with summers? Self-study for AP tests?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our college office asks students to avoid any pay to play summer programs.
Does a high school summer short study abroad program count as pay to play? Is it just the potential bad optics of looking rich?
We hoped our kid would get a lot out of his educational trip to Europe. At one point he seemed interested in international affairs as a major. He did not go on his high school sponsored pure vacation trip because it repeated places he's already seen.
In general, he felt surrounded by spoiled resume-builders and party-harders, but he liked the classes and field trips. It was two lines on the Common App in the end. He didn't feel comfortable mining it for essays because it was just 3 weeks long and he had other things to talk about. On balance we think it was worth it, but partially as a preview of people he might expect to meet at college. His top choice was just a flyover safety school to them. Very eye-opening.
Yes, anything that has a tuition. My kids are at a NE boarding school and plenty of their peers do this kind of summer program but the counselors recommend they leave them off of their applications.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our college office asks students to avoid any pay to play summer programs.
Does a high school summer short study abroad program count as pay to play? Is it just the potential bad optics of looking rich?
We hoped our kid would get a lot out of his educational trip to Europe. At one point he seemed interested in international affairs as a major. He did not go on his high school sponsored pure vacation trip because it repeated places he's already seen.
In general, he felt surrounded by spoiled resume-builders and party-harders, but he liked the classes and field trips. It was two lines on the Common App in the end. He didn't feel comfortable mining it for essays because it was just 3 weeks long and he had other things to talk about. On balance we think it was worth it, but partially as a preview of people he might expect to meet at college. His top choice was just a flyover safety school to them. Very eye-opening.
Anonymous wrote:Some colleges offer subject specific summer programs. Some summer programs are merit based. DS is looking to travel & learn this summer. What programs should we look at?
Which are BS and which are legit?
Anonymous wrote:Our college office asks students to avoid any pay to play summer programs.