Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a great story, but how did four students (related or not) from the same high school in Ohio get offers from both Harvard and Yale? Don't H & Y limit the number of offers to individual schools, especially those in the middle of Ohio?
No one will take this on, they will ignore the elephant in the room. So typical.
Sorry, I don't work in Yale admissions so I don't have any f-ing clue, same as 99.9999% of DCUM posters.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a great story, but how did four students (related or not) from the same high school in Ohio get offers from both Harvard and Yale? Don't H & Y limit the number of offers to individual schools, especially those in the middle of Ohio?
No one will take this on, they will ignore the elephant in the room. So typical.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a great story, but how did four students (related or not) from the same high school in Ohio get offers from both Harvard and Yale? Don't H & Y limit the number of offers to individual schools, especially those in the middle of Ohio?
No one will take this on, they will ignore the elephant in the room. So typical.
Anonymous wrote:Nigel and Aaron look like they could be identical twins. Zach and Nick also look like they could be identical twins.
I know that they are quads but are they all fraternal twins or is there one or two sets of identical twins among them?
What an amazing accomplishment for them all to get into the top schools like that. I wonder if they'll all go to the same school or choose different schools based on their majors.
Anonymous wrote:This is a great story, but how did four students (related or not) from the same high school in Ohio get offers from both Harvard and Yale? Don't H & Y limit the number of offers to individual schools, especially those in the middle of Ohio?
Anonymous wrote:Both are great stories. Good job, boys!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nigel and Aaron look like they could be identical twins. Zach and Nick also look like they could be identical twins.
I know that they are quads but are they all fraternal twins or is there one or two sets of identical twins among them?
What an amazing accomplishment for them all to get into the top schools like that. I wonder if they'll all go to the same school or choose different schools based on their majors.
Quads can happen in a number of different ways, including:
--4 separate eggs (fraternal quads, same genetic relationship as any siblings)
--3 eggs, one splits into 2, effectively creating one identical set of "twins" and two singletons
--2 eggs, each splitting into 2 (2 sets of identical twins--this would be incredibly rare I think)
--2 eggs, one splitting into 2 and then one of those splitting again (1 set of identical triplets and one singleton)
--1 egg, splits in 2, then each splits again (identical quads)
Even before fertility treatments (I have no idea if such treatments were involved in the conception of these children), fraternal multiples of any kind (twin/triplet/etc) are much more common than identical twins. So, statistically speaking, it is more likely that they are all fraternal than that any of them are identical. And, the reports I've read are that they are, in fact, fraternal quads.
Anonymous wrote:Nigel and Aaron look like they could be identical twins. Zach and Nick also look like they could be identical twins.
I know that they are quads but are they all fraternal twins or is there one or two sets of identical twins among them?
What an amazing accomplishment for them all to get into the top schools like that. I wonder if they'll all go to the same school or choose different schools based on their majors.