Anonymous wrote:Art history at Dartmouth, then MBB or GS. I don't think anyone would complain about that outcome.
Anonymous wrote:Art history at Dartmouth, then MBB or GS. I don't think anyone would complain about that outcome.
Anonymous wrote:1) This is unlikely to work. Colleges want to see students take the most rigorous classes available, so taking easier classes will hurt your application.
2) Even if it did work, why would you want your student to learn less in high school? For overall life success, it's better learn more in high school and then do very well in a slightly less competitive college than enter a slightly more competitive college with worse preparation.
Anonymous wrote:In your experience, is it worth gaming the system by taking easier classes in high school to keep a very high GPA, just to improve chances of getting into a T20 or Ivy? Then once admitted, switching into a different major?
I recently heard about several students who entered T20 schools with less competitive or undersubscribed majors. Their plan was to move into premed after enrollment. But during freshman year they ran into the typical STEM weed-out courses, calculus, general chemistry, and physics. Many of them struggled and some had to abandon the premed track.
On the other hand, what about students who took the most rigorous courses in high school but ended up with a lower GPA and attended a non-T20 college? Do they tend to be more successful on the premed track because they are already used to the workload and difficulty?
For those who have seen this play out, does this strategy actually work in the long run? Or does avoiding rigorous coursework in high school end up making the transition to college stem or econ much harder?
Anonymous wrote:Not everyone wants to be stem/pre-med. If you want that you can’t truly game it.
Might work for econ or math.
Anonymous wrote:In your experience, is it worth gaming the system by taking easier classes in high school to keep a very high GPA, just to improve chances of getting into a T20 or Ivy? Then once admitted, switching into a different major?
I recently heard about several students who entered T20 schools with less competitive or undersubscribed majors. Their plan was to move into premed after enrollment. But during freshman year they ran into the typical STEM weed-out courses, calculus, general chemistry, and physics. Many of them struggled and some had to abandon the premed track.
On the other hand, what about students who took the most rigorous courses in high school but ended up with a lower GPA and attended a non-T20 college? Do they tend to be more successful on the premed track because they are already used to the workload and difficulty?
For those who have seen this play out, does this strategy actually work in the long run? Or does avoiding rigorous coursework in high school end up making the transition to college stem or econ much harder?
Anonymous wrote:A girl in my DC’s class did this. She literally told her that she will apply for an undersubscribed major and then transfer to the most competitive major once admitted. She took the same classes as my DD and had similar grades. They both were in AP calc A/B in senior year. The girl also got help with EC’s (book publishing etc) from her parents. Ended up at HYP and then successfully transferred to the most prestigious department.. so yes u can game the system.. people do it all the time..