Anonymous wrote:My neighbor, who has solid C student kids, swears that the key is only applying to a variety of out of state schools.
She's got one at Elon, CSU Dominguez Hills, Colorado State, and one at a university in Buffalo (not sure of the exact name). None of them were great students. None were outstanding athletes that got scholarships. None did any extracurriculars to pad their academic resumes. After the first two got rejected or wait listed at every VA school they applied to, she only had the other two apply to out of state schools, where they were accepted at all.
Now, will this work for C students in VA applying to Harvard? No. But it seemed to work for her 4 applying to average schools.
Anonymous wrote:Year end grades are all that are reported to colleges so you can have an B or C here and there- just try to pull things up as best you can for final grades. Jr. year is the most important year by far for things like Early Action and Early Decision - so start to finish if there is one year that can define where you will end up, it's that.
Purdue, Penn Stare, Virginia Tech, Miami University (Ohio)Anonymous wrote:After seeing a number of posts form parents of teens freaked out about a couple of Bs, I wanted to truth-check. Anyone out there want to share where their Non-straight A student got in to college? Kids who have A-/B +'s on their report cards. thanks
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pop over to the colleges & universities board of DCUM and you'll find some discussion of this.
It is not the overall GPA but it is how you get there. My kid had 2.0 GPA in his freshman and sophmore year. He had 4.2 in his junior and senior year and score 1570 on the SAT. He is accepted into Brown U.
Anonymous wrote:DS with B+'s in math and B's in languages is 4 out of 4 at his early action colleges. Better to challenge yourself bytaking a rigorous and let the chips fall where they may.
Anonymous wrote:Pop over to the colleges & universities board of DCUM and you'll find some discussion of this.