Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know I’m going to get heat for this but I’ve read others say same, my stellar across the board got into a few ivies and waitlisted there, noticed they took lower stats but still very strong kids. I do wonder if they have some sort of model, not saying yield protect, that forecasts likeliness to attend whether it be stats, location, high school record, and so on.
That is exactly what is meant by yield protection.
Anonymous wrote:I know I’m going to get heat for this but I’ve read others say same, my stellar across the board got into a few ivies and waitlisted there, noticed they took lower stats but still very strong kids. I do wonder if they have some sort of model, not saying yield protect, that forecasts likeliness to attend whether it be stats, location, high school record, and so on.
Anonymous wrote:It's an almost impossible admit at my senior's private school. The ivies outside of HYP are easier. This is based on data from the college office. If you can get into Vanderbilt you can get into Yale.
Other privates have a much easier time with Vanderbilt. there are private schools in the south (in florida, Texas etc) and even locally here that send a half dozen kids to Vanderbilt and they're not in the top 10% of the class. Like anything, it's very much high school dependent.
Anonymous wrote:It's an almost impossible admit at my senior's private school. The ivies outside of HYP are easier. This is based on data from the college office. If you can get into Vanderbilt you can get into Yale.
Other privates have a much easier time with Vanderbilt. there are private schools in the south (in florida, Texas etc) and even locally here that send a half dozen kids to Vanderbilt and they're not in the top 10% of the class. Like anything, it's very much high school dependent.
Anonymous wrote:Ivies and OOS for highly ranked flagships (UNC, UVA) have been an easier admit than Vanderbilt at my kid’s non-DMV private
Anonymous wrote:It's not really an idea when you confirm with school-based counselors and IECs the number of highly qualified applicants that are rejected each year. Data released by Vanderbilt also substantiates the claim that Vandy is highly selective. And news flash -- it's not uncommon to see selective privates accept test-optional applicants, athletes, legacies, etc. with less-than-perfect academic credentials.
Welcome to selective college admissions!