Anonymous wrote:True story. I went to public school. I tutored my roommate from a top 3 BS through the math and science of our first year of a top 10 engineering school.
The thing was he had a 1550 SAT score back when that actually was crazy high. I was 200 points lower.
I spent my free time on the XC and track teams and trying to sleep at night in a crazy dorm.
He spent his free time drinking and napping while I was in class taking notes we both used.
I burned my candle at both ends but he was just going through the motions he had learned at BS.
The end of both semesters he stopped drinking and his grades went almost straight up.
I was just exhausted from all I was doing and didn't know how to change my priorities to school when it counted.
Our freshman years GPAs were 3.7 and 2.0. Guess which was which?
Anonymous wrote:Frankly, the reason parents spend $40k/year for a top private school is the education they receive K-12, not future college admissions. And the students who do the best are "intellectual" in ways that run-of-the-mill public schools just don't even try to meet. The basic public school curriculum just doesn't come close to the humanities and social science at my DC's school.
Anonymous wrote:OP do you actually have a QUESTION?
Anonymous wrote:elite colleges will be easier. In actuality, colleges draw from this pool for the following: Full Pay, Legacy, URM, HOOK. MOST will have 3/4 of the aforementioned therefore killing a logo of birds with one stone. If you don't or won't have 3/4 of those criteria, not only shouldn't you send them there, you should also skip TJ and go right to a middle of the road public HS that offers either IB or AP. Have your kid graduate in top 5% of that class. Much easier path.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think most people send their kids to selective private in hopes of securing admission to elite colleges.
They send them seeking a better education than they would have received in public school and hope that education will prepare them to succeed at whatever college they attend.
Ok, so, my kid is at a HYP. She went to a middle of the road public school. Her current roommate went to a top 5 BS. DD has been tutoring her in both Calculus and Chem…she is NOT prepared for the scions whatsoever. Anecdotal, yes, but don't think that private HSs are good at everything, bc they are not necessarily better than your local public
Anonymous wrote:I don't think most people send their kids to selective private in hopes of securing admission to elite colleges.
They send them seeking a better education than they would have received in public school and hope that education will prepare them to succeed at whatever college they attend.
Anonymous wrote:I don't think most people send their kids to selective private in hopes of securing admission to elite colleges.
They send them seeking a better education than they would have received in public school and hope that education will prepare them to succeed at whatever college they attend.