Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. But if you claim something you didn’t do and get into a selective college your peers or their parents are likely to call the school and tell them. Kids get rescinded this way. There are only so many Ivy slots, and some parents are cutthroat to the extreme.
How would your peers and their parents even know what you put in your application?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. But if you claim something you didn’t do and get into a selective college your peers or their parents are likely to call the school and tell them. Kids get rescinded this way. There are only so many Ivy slots, and some parents are cutthroat to the extreme.
Well who would be dumb enough to tell their peers that they are lying on their college applications?
Anonymous wrote:No. But if you claim something you didn’t do and get into a selective college your peers or their parents are likely to call the school and tell them. Kids get rescinded this way. There are only so many Ivy slots, and some parents are cutthroat to the extreme.
Anonymous wrote:No. But if you claim something you didn’t do and get into a selective college your peers or their parents are likely to call the school and tell them. Kids get rescinded this way. There are only so many Ivy slots, and some parents are cutthroat to the extreme.
Anonymous wrote:The guidance counselor at school signs off on classes, gpa, test scores, and school based extracurriculars. I suppose one could lie about out of school activities, but what would be the point? If someone were found out, they’d be embarrassed and probably have their acceptance revoked. Who wants to take a chance like that?