Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, MIT is a reach for everyone.
My super high stats kid thought their super high stats (like perfect SAT score and almost a 5.0 weighted) would help them get into MIT, CMU, GATech etc.. Nope.
Not really. If you won IMO gold, MIT is actually a target (not safety).
Yep. My kid was a 1600 SAT (one seating), maxed out GPA, valedictorian, private school in Texas. White, no hook, wealthy background, speaks 3 languages fluently. Was denied admission straight up to 5 of the 7 top 25 schools he applied to. 1 waitlist that never materialized.
So no, there are no targets in the Top25. He is going to the UK.
Anonymous wrote:Ok, thanks, that makes sense. Our oldest is at a service academy, and I actually I did wonder about their acceptance rates the other way around...i.e., if they're between 10-20% depending on the academy, sure that includes lots of students who had no chance, academically or physically?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, MIT is a reach for everyone.
My super high stats kid thought their super high stats (like perfect SAT score and almost a 5.0 weighted) would help them get into MIT, CMU, GATech etc.. Nope.
Not really. If you won IMO gold, MIT is actually a target (not safety).
Anonymous wrote:Yes, MIT is a reach for everyone.
My super high stats kid thought their super high stats (like perfect SAT score and almost a 5.0 weighted) would help them get into MIT, CMU, GATech etc.. Nope.
Anonymous wrote:This article / graphic might help it make a bit more sense. https://support.collegekickstart.com/hc/en-us/articles/217485088-Differences-Between-Likely-Target-Reach-and-Unlikely-Schools
You don't need to use College Kickstart; I used the general idea and made my own version in Google Sheets.
You would populate the "cells" based on your kid's school list and where your kid's stats have them in relation to the school's Common Data Set info.
Anonymous wrote:Collegevine has something similar but it is kind of crazy. For example, Penn RD is a target for my rising senior, but we have categorized it as a reach (and a high reach at that!)