Anonymous wrote:You have to know someone. If you don’t, try to impress an athletic coach maybe.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the student interview is important for Potomac.
OP here. I am sure it is, but again, wondering what exactly are they looking for or what should the student allude to during the interview. It's not just our friend's son who seemed to have it all but was rejected. We keep hearing stories of similarly great kids who got rejected or waitlisted.
Anonymous wrote:The kids who got in from our K-8 were siblings and big $$$$ donors. Honestly, unless your kid is getting coach support or bringing some other unique criteria, I think that’s the formula.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the student interview is important for Potomac.
OP here. I am sure it is, but again, wondering what exactly are they looking for or what should the student allude to during the interview. It's not just our friend's son who seemed to have it all but was rejected. We keep hearing stories of similarly great kids who got rejected or waitlisted.
Anonymous wrote:I think the student interview is important for Potomac.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have to know someone. If you don’t, try to impress an athletic coach maybe.
This is not true.
OP, I wonder if the individual sport was a negative for your friend. They are a small school and so they don’t want to give waivers for the sports requirements. They need students to participate in the athletics and extracurricular programs at the school, not be a fencing superstar on their own.
Anonymous wrote:You have to know someone. If you don’t, try to impress an athletic coach maybe.