Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your post suggests that what you want to ask is:
- Will you fudge grades so all the kids look awesome for admissions?
- If my kid gets a 3.5 or lower, do you have any magic tricks to make Harvard love him anyway?
Are you ok? Why so snarky? No, I am OP and I am worried about my child. I feel, in 7th grade, I’m starting to sense an unhealthy trend. I don’t wish Harvard for her, I want to her to end up where she belongs. Thank you for your constructive input.
Because this is ridiculous. Your child will end up where they belong and no college counseling office will really have an impact on that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your post suggests that what you want to ask is:
- Will you fudge grades so all the kids look awesome for admissions?
- If my kid gets a 3.5 or lower, do you have any magic tricks to make Harvard love him anyway?
Are you ok? Why so snarky? No, I am OP and I am worried about my child. I feel, in 7th grade, I’m starting to sense an unhealthy trend. I don’t wish Harvard for her, I want to her to end up where she belongs. Thank you for your constructive input.
Because this is ridiculous. Your child will end up where they belong and no college counseling office will really have an impact on that.
Thank you. I haven’t gone through this process, so I will admit that I’ve been influenced in to fear by some posts on here. I would like to believe that what you say is true, but it just doesn’t seem like that’s what people are experiencing. So I guess I wonder if I leave my child where she is, where she’s happy, but the work is getting difficult and she’ll be a mostly B student, or move her somewhere else.
And back to the original question, how do I get to the root of it all? I don’t even know what questions to ask. It never would’ve crossed my mind to ask about the average gpa of the class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your post suggests that what you want to ask is:
- Will you fudge grades so all the kids look awesome for admissions?
- If my kid gets a 3.5 or lower, do you have any magic tricks to make Harvard love him anyway?
Are you ok? Why so snarky? No, I am OP and I am worried about my child. I feel, in 7th grade, I’m starting to sense an unhealthy trend. I don’t wish Harvard for her, I want to her to end up where she belongs. Thank you for your constructive input.
Because this is ridiculous. Your child will end up where they belong and no college counseling office will really have an impact on that.
Anonymous wrote:What questions should I ask potential high schools regarding college placement. I have read many posts expressing disappointing outcomes, whether because of grading systems, college counseling officers or other reasons. What are the right questions to ask to determine the best place to put my DC in an effort to give them the right and best future outcomes? Any advice from parents who've gone through the process is appreciated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your post suggests that what you want to ask is:
- Will you fudge grades so all the kids look awesome for admissions?
- If my kid gets a 3.5 or lower, do you have any magic tricks to make Harvard love him anyway?
Are you ok? Why so snarky? No, I am OP and I am worried about my child. I feel, in 7th grade, I’m starting to sense an unhealthy trend. I don’t wish Harvard for her, I want to her to end up where she belongs. Thank you for your constructive input.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you're considering private HS because of college placement, you are doing it wrong.
At best, private schools can help your child thrive academically - whether that means more rigor, more support, smaller class sizes, new and different clubs and ECs, etc.
And if your child reaches their academic potential, you're in the same boat as every other public and private HS parent - scrambling with an extremely dysfunctional and competitive college admissions landscape.
OP here - to clarify, we are already in a Big 3 private in 7th grade. We are weighing staying there vs moving to another private. We are not considering public.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your post suggests that what you want to ask is:
- Will you fudge grades so all the kids look awesome for admissions?
- If my kid gets a 3.5 or lower, do you have any magic tricks to make Harvard love him anyway?
Are you ok? Why so snarky? No, I am OP and I am worried about my child. I feel, in 7th grade, I’m starting to sense an unhealthy trend. I don’t wish Harvard for her, I want to her to end up where she belongs. Thank you for your constructive input.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your post suggests that what you want to ask is:
- Will you fudge grades so all the kids look awesome for admissions?
- If my kid gets a 3.5 or lower, do you have any magic tricks to make Harvard love him anyway?
Are you ok? Why so snarky? No, I am OP and I am worried about my child. I feel, in 7th grade, I’m starting to sense an unhealthy trend. I don’t wish Harvard for her, I want to her to end up where she belongs. Thank you for your constructive input.
Stop with the TiKTok psychology ..
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your post suggests that what you want to ask is:
- Will you fudge grades so all the kids look awesome for admissions?
- If my kid gets a 3.5 or lower, do you have any magic tricks to make Harvard love him anyway?
Are you ok? Why so snarky? No, I am OP and I am worried about my child. I feel, in 7th grade, I’m starting to sense an unhealthy trend. I don’t wish Harvard for her, I want to her to end up where she belongs. Thank you for your constructive input.
Anonymous wrote:Your post suggests that what you want to ask is:
- Will you fudge grades so all the kids look awesome for admissions?
- If my kid gets a 3.5 or lower, do you have any magic tricks to make Harvard love him anyway?
Anonymous wrote:If you're considering private HS because of college placement, you are doing it wrong.
At best, private schools can help your child thrive academically - whether that means more rigor, more support, smaller class sizes, new and different clubs and ECs, etc.
And if your child reaches their academic potential, you're in the same boat as every other public and private HS parent - scrambling with an extremely dysfunctional and competitive college admissions landscape.