Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:AOs balance talents, not majors.
Not always. AO’s look for kids that meet institutional goals. That could mean filling seats for certain majors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A contrived example:
HS Student took 6 years of Latin, took lots of History classes, no Econ, but minimal science/math. Student has ECs in Latin Club and History Club. College admissions will figure out that student is not planning STEM major. Student claims Classics, which is credible given courses and ECs.
Different example:
HS Student took 4 years of Latin, standard set of History/Government, no Econ, lots of Math and lab Science classes. ECs are robotics team and math team. Admissions will figure out student plans STEM, even if they claim to intend Classics.
The intended business majors will usually pick HS Econ classes and a full but standard set of math classes.
If someone genuinely wants Classics, then fine to say so, but course choices and ECs should be consistent with the claimed intended major.
Most of these kids are taking 4 years of math and science. Even classics majors hoping for top 20 schools are taking lots rigorous load all 4 years in all subjects. But yeah, I might leave robotics off activities list
Anonymous wrote:I know that Duke is looking for classics majors. But cannot always discern institutional priorities.
Anonymous wrote:A contrived example:
HS Student took 6 years of Latin, took lots of History classes, no Econ, but minimal science/math. Student has ECs in Latin Club and History Club. College admissions will figure out that student is not planning STEM major. Student claims Classics, which is credible given courses and ECs.
Different example:
HS Student took 4 years of Latin, standard set of History/Government, no Econ, lots of Math and lab Science classes. ECs are robotics team and math team. Admissions will figure out student plans STEM, even if they claim to intend Classics.
The intended business majors will usually pick HS Econ classes and a full but standard set of math classes.
If someone genuinely wants Classics, then fine to say so, but course choices and ECs should be consistent with the claimed intended major.
Anonymous wrote:AOs balance talents, not majors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Depends on the school. UVA, no. VT, yes. Don’t try to game the system, you will lose.
You at not gaming the system if you’re actually interested in the major. DH was accepted to a very selective SLAC as a physics major. He was one of four and would not have been accepted to other popular majors like economics or business.
Anonymous wrote:Depends on the school. UVA, no. VT, yes. Don’t try to game the system, you will lose.