Anonymous wrote:I agree that it does not feel developmentally appropriate or genuine to expect a 17 year-old kid to have a well-defined narrative. We had a lot of strife about this during the application process for our truly well-rounded kid who could tell a million stories about themselves that were semi-true. It worked out in the end, but it was a struggle
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't start looking at their activities until Feb of junior year. Then just see what connects what THEY'VE ALREADY DONE.
I promise you. The spike is already there. You don't need to manufacture anything.
This. My 2025 kid has been spiky since elementary school (although didn't have the grades to be competitive for a highly rejective school because she was too spiky). My 2028 will have much better grades -- he's not as spiky but I'm confident he'll find a story to tell about the things he chooses to do without paying attention to college admissions.
How do you not have the grades for this reason?
Anonymous wrote:Don't start looking at their activities until Feb of junior year. Then just see what connects what THEY'VE ALREADY DONE.
I promise you. The spike is already there. You don't need to manufacture anything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure what your question is but I’ve got one kid with a strong “narrative” who landed at an Ivy and another who is less remarkable on paper but every bit as terrific a person and going to a nice but not tippy top state school. No parent curating, no college counselors, they figured out their own paths and we supported as we could. I’ve known lots of kids over the years who have ended up at t20 type schools without being heavily pushed by parents, it’s just who they are.
No one is saying that all pointy kids are curated. There are definitely plenty of kids who do that naturally. But the obsession with this type of kid vs. the "well-rounded" kid is not cool. Having a specialty is great and should definitely be rewarded. But now it seems like that is the only way to get into top schools. And that is not cool. It is particularly ironic given that many of these schools encourage students to have a very well-rounded academic experience.
I am admittedly biased as a somewhat pointy person (who went to an Ivy+ school at least partially on the basis of being really good at math, though not off the charts) who is the parent of two not particularly pointy kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't start looking at their activities until Feb of junior year. Then just see what connects what THEY'VE ALREADY DONE.
I promise you. The spike is already there. You don't need to manufacture anything.
This. My 2025 kid has been spiky since elementary school (although didn't have the grades to be competitive for a highly rejective school because she was too spiky). My 2028 will have much better grades -- he's not as spiky but I'm confident he'll find a story to tell about the things he chooses to do without paying attention to college admissions.
Anonymous wrote:Don't start looking at their activities until Feb of junior year. Then just see what connects what THEY'VE ALREADY DONE.
I promise you. The spike is already there. You don't need to manufacture anything.
Anonymous wrote:Not sure what your question is but I’ve got one kid with a strong “narrative” who landed at an Ivy and another who is less remarkable on paper but every bit as terrific a person and going to a nice but not tippy top state school. No parent curating, no college counselors, they figured out their own paths and we supported as we could. I’ve known lots of kids over the years who have ended up at t20 type schools without being heavily pushed by parents, it’s just who they are.
Anonymous wrote:Is this even normal or healthy developmentally? For a teenager to have a carefully curated spike or narrative that’s the product of an expensive college counselor’s hame plan? Aren’t teenagers supposed to be trying different things and aren’t they just beginning to figure out what they like? I understand that a few scattered unrelated activities, a typical retail or food service job and maybe a couple awards won’t cut it for T-20’s in 2025, but what is all this doing to our kids?