Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:College Board is primarily a company that collects and shares data.
More and more I’m realizing it’s basically a data mining racket.
Anonymous wrote:College Board is primarily a company that collects and shares data.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So I (my kiddo) just got a generic college email inviting him to participate in such as such because “they’ve taken notice of [his] impressive academic credentials.”
Is this just generic posturing or is there’s something that my child, a sophomore (not a college applicant yet), would have done to actually get noticed?
Do universities have access to student grades or test scores or something?
Did I click yes on the 10th grade PSAT or something that allowed this and just don’t remember?
Case Western Right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tulane, Northeastern, or UChicago?
Schools buy these lists and send away. Vanderbilt has sent my sophomore two sets of junk mail. Nothing from UChicago yet nor Northeastern. The admissions department exists to maximize the number of applicants from which they could choose.
That's why Yale is coming to our high school next week. I doubt that they really intend on admitting anyone from our school, but that's the name of the game.
Anonymous wrote:Tulane, Northeastern, or UChicago?
Anonymous wrote:So I (my kiddo) just got a generic college email inviting him to participate in such as such because “they’ve taken notice of [his] impressive academic credentials.”
Is this just generic posturing or is there’s something that my child, a sophomore (not a college applicant yet), would have done to actually get noticed?
Do universities have access to student grades or test scores or something?
Did I click yes on the 10th grade PSAT or something that allowed this and just don’t remember?
Anonymous wrote:It's a form letter. Colleges buy scores in batches and send everyone in the specific range a letter. Don't read anything into it.