Anonymous wrote:for the record, I'm feeling good about the deferral from northwestern (on your behalf).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The ACT ship has sailed and not helpful.l to harp on
That’s an A range student.
Problem is that RD is crapshoot esp at all the listed schools that take everyone ED. The reason why the best advice is find an EDIi
Yes. ED2:
Emory; wake; Tulane; Middlebury; Colgate
Anonymous wrote:for the record, I'm feeling good about the deferral from northwestern (on your behalf).
Anonymous wrote:The 33 isn’t the issue…
It’s the story: are there national level awards? Narrative? Unique strong distinctive ECs? If so, something will work out.
How are the LORs? Mom - call CCO on Tuesday to discuss.
Essays must be crisp. Spend next 48 hours dissecting each one with kid.
If it’s a run of the mill HS resume, varsity captain, model UN blah blah, no it won’t work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:[youtube]aqAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s his state school?
What about Villanova?
Conn College?
Vassar?
Hamilton?
UMass Amherst?
My son has better stats (albeit as a business major) and was rejected ED1 at Villanova. Otherwise, the rest of your suggestions (perhaps with the exception of Hamilton) are great. I would also add Sarah Lawrence.
Sarah Lawrence seems so far out of left field for a kid EAing Tulane.
Well, there are two ways of looking at OP's original post:
1. The kid is a humanities major and is basically a B+ student: this is a perfect candidate for Sarah Lawrence.
2. The kid is chasing prestige and wants to go to the highest ranked school they can get into: change Tulane to ED2.
Tulane prestigious? lol.
It is a great school. Grow up.
It’s a dump with an inflated application pool to rig their admission stats.
Anonymous wrote:If deferral is from Northeastern then that’s a sign of a weak application. Not sure about Tulane. Help your kid find a school they are happy with that has a realistic acceptance rate.
Sounds like you have gotten a lot of bad advice and the school list is all over the place. My family also made many mistakes so don’t feel bad, it’s a horrible confusing process.
Anonymous wrote:Check ED acceptance rates. It's possible that Tulane's is the highest. Convert the deferral to ED2.
Anonymous wrote:The 33 isn’t the issue…
It’s the story: are there national level awards? Narrative? Unique strong distinctive ECs? If so, something will work out.
How are the LORs? Mom - call CCO on Tuesday to discuss.
Essays must be crisp. Spend next 48 hours dissecting each one with kid.
If it’s a run of the mill HS resume, varsity captain, model UN blah blah, no it won’t work.
Anonymous wrote:The ACT ship has sailed and not helpful.l to harp on
That’s an A range student.
Problem is that RD is crapshoot esp at all the listed schools that take everyone ED. The reason why the best advice is find an EDIi
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would think he would get into Colgate and bucknell. He should have some true safeties.
He has some state schools but not great options tbh
So find some true safeties and low targets, find ones he will like and want to attend and get your applications in.
Every year there are people who stress because they are not getting acceptances, but their entire list is largely Reaches and high reaches. When acceptance rates are single digits or even less than 20%, it's a damn reach for everyone.
Find true safeties and true targets and you will have somewhere to attend you like.
And yes, there are safeties and targets for everyone, even high stats students. Your kid can/will be happy somewhere, and it would be better if you pick those now, not whatever "is left" come may....I can assure you they likely wont be as happy with that
Think there are safeties tho. MSU; Pitt; Indiana; Miami.
University of Miami? Definitely not a safety with those stats.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:[youtube]aqAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s his state school?
What about Villanova?
Conn College?
Vassar?
Hamilton?
UMass Amherst?
My son has better stats (albeit as a business major) and was rejected ED1 at Villanova. Otherwise, the rest of your suggestions (perhaps with the exception of Hamilton) are great. I would also add Sarah Lawrence.
Sarah Lawrence seems so far out of left field for a kid EAing Tulane.
Well, there are two ways of looking at OP's original post:
1. The kid is a humanities major and is basically a B+ student: this is a perfect candidate for Sarah Lawrence.
2. The kid is chasing prestige and wants to go to the highest ranked school they can get into: change Tulane to ED2.
Tulane prestigious? lol.
It is a great school. Grow up.
It’s a dump with an inflated application pool to rig their admission stats.
We were not impressed during our tour. Business school was nice but that’s about it. It’s ehh.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:[youtube]aqAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s his state school?
What about Villanova?
Conn College?
Vassar?
Hamilton?
UMass Amherst?
My son has better stats (albeit as a business major) and was rejected ED1 at Villanova. Otherwise, the rest of your suggestions (perhaps with the exception of Hamilton) are great. I would also add Sarah Lawrence.
Sarah Lawrence seems so far out of left field for a kid EAing Tulane.
Well, there are two ways of looking at OP's original post:
1. The kid is a humanities major and is basically a B+ student: this is a perfect candidate for Sarah Lawrence.
2. The kid is chasing prestige and wants to go to the highest ranked school they can get into: change Tulane to ED2.
Tulane prestigious? lol.
It is a great school. Grow up.
It’s a dump with an inflated application pool to rig their admission stats.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would think he would get into Colgate and bucknell. He should have some true safeties.
He has some state schools but not great options tbh
So find some true safeties and low targets, find ones he will like and want to attend and get your applications in.
Every year there are people who stress because they are not getting acceptances, but their entire list is largely Reaches and high reaches. When acceptance rates are single digits or even less than 20%, it's a damn reach for everyone.
Find true safeties and true targets and you will have somewhere to attend you like.
And yes, there are safeties and targets for everyone, even high stats students. Your kid can/will be happy somewhere, and it would be better if you pick those now, not whatever "is left" come may....I can assure you they likely wont be as happy with that
Think there are safeties tho. MSU; Pitt; Indiana; Miami.