Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless you are a consistent, ie every year since graduation, with increasing denominations, just being a graduate of a school isn't going to help, and increasingly, schools don't even bother with legacy preferences or at best for ED.
Simply not true. Not sure why you’re saying that. There’s plenty of research that demonstrates quite clearly the significant legacy advantage.
Perhaps 10 years ago, but not any longer. The "top" schools are more focused on first generation college students and other priorities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless you are a consistent, ie every year since graduation, with increasing denominations, just being a graduate of a school isn't going to help, and increasingly, schools don't even bother with legacy preferences or at best for ED.
Simply not true. Not sure why you’re saying that. There’s plenty of research that demonstrates quite clearly the significant legacy advantage.
Anonymous wrote:PP your kids were not denied admission to punish you. They were denied because they themselves weren't qualified.
As for OP's question, legacy by definition means "has a degree from." But, to be sure, look it up on the school's website, and if you can't find the answer there, email the admissions office and ask. Don't base your decision on DCUM's know-nothing advice.
Anonymous wrote:This was me. I did very poorly and was dismissed at the end of my second for poor academic performance. I transferred elsewhere and refocused, graduating magma cum laude a few years later. Long story.
Anyway, both my kids applied to my first school, and despite having excellent credentials and being accepted everywhere else they applied, neither was accepted. I am convinced it was my record that did them in. I felt awful about it, and it’s a secret I’ll take to my grave.
Anonymous wrote:Unless you are a consistent, ie every year since graduation, with increasing denominations, just being a graduate of a school isn't going to help, and increasingly, schools don't even bother with legacy preferences or at best for ED.
Anonymous wrote:PP your kids were not denied admission to punish you. They were denied because they themselves weren't qualified.
As for OP's question, legacy by definition means "has a degree from." But, to be sure, look it up on the school's website, and if you can't find the answer there, email the admissions office and ask. Don't base your decision on DCUM's know-nothing advice.
Anonymous wrote:This was me. I did very poorly and was dismissed at the end of my second for poor academic performance. I transferred elsewhere and refocused, graduating magma cum laude a few years later. Long story.
Anyway, both my kids applied to my first school, and despite having excellent credentials and being accepted everywhere else they applied, neither was accepted. I am convinced it was my record that did them in. I felt awful about it, and it’s a secret I’ll take to my grave.
Anonymous wrote:If he did not graduate, then your family is not legacy. Legacy by definition implies that your parent graduated.