Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Travel sports parents lie because they can’t come to terms with the last decade of carting their kids around was a complete waste.
I absolutely think it’s this. 100%.
Without touching the lying claim, what an odd take. How is spending time with your kid in a healthy physical activity a waste?
It’s the travel cost/time commitment that is the waste. It did absolutely nothing to get your kid into college - which is why most people do travel. If you want to spend time with your kid in a healthy physical activity, why aren’t you doing rec? It saves you thousands of dollars, and time spent traveling to tournaments and practice.
I mean if you want to blow thousands on travel for sh¡ts and giggles, have at it. But most people have a college goal in mind.
My kid did travel baseball because he loves the game. It didn't have a damn thing to do with colleges.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no such thing as an athletic full ride at D3 schools. Meaning, even if you are a D1 level athlete and want to attend, say, Randolph Macon College in Ashland, they simply can not come up with any scheme to get you 4 years for free.
- signed, father of a D1 athlete that actually wanted to go to a smaller school and be a student athlete.
NP. They can certainly give you extremely significant merit aid. My kid was awarded enough in merit aid that the private D3 was cheaper than instate.
That's simply false. You're not going to convince me because we tried every way possible for my kid to do this and the only 'free' offers at the end of the day were D1.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Travel sports parents lie because they can’t come to terms with the last decade of carting their kids around was a complete waste.
I absolutely think it’s this. 100%.
Without touching the lying claim, what an odd take. How is spending time with your kid in a healthy physical activity a waste?
It’s the travel cost/time commitment that is the waste. It did absolutely nothing to get your kid into college - which is why most people do travel. If you want to spend time with your kid in a healthy physical activity, why aren’t you doing rec? It saves you thousands of dollars, and time spent traveling to tournaments and practice.
I mean if you want to blow thousands on travel for sh¡ts and giggles, have at it. But most people have a college goal in mind.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Travel sports parents lie because they can’t come to terms with the last decade of carting their kids around was a complete waste.
I absolutely think it’s this. 100%.
Without touching the lying claim, what an odd take. How is spending time with your kid in a healthy physical activity a waste?
It’s the travel cost/time commitment that is the waste. It did absolutely nothing to get your kid into college - which is why most people do travel. If you want to spend time with your kid in a healthy physical activity, why aren’t you doing rec? It saves you thousands of dollars, and time spent traveling to tournaments and practice.
I mean if you want to blow thousands on travel for sh¡ts and giggles, have at it. But most people have a college goal in mind.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Plenty of small, not prestigious, not selective D3 schools give everybody tons of merit aid.
D3 schools can't give sports scholarships, but I assume this family is betting that you don't know that so that is why they are bragging this way.
It is possible that they receive some extra merit aid compared to the next person for some leadership award or something like that which mysteriously always goes to athletes.
If a coach gets the student merit aid it’s essentially a sports scholarship.
Sure they don’t call it that. Loophole.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Travel sports parents lie because they can’t come to terms with the last decade of carting their kids around was a complete waste.
I absolutely think it’s this. 100%.
Without touching the lying claim, what an odd take. How is spending time with your kid in a healthy physical activity a waste?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Plenty of small, not prestigious, not selective D3 schools give everybody tons of merit aid.
D3 schools can't give sports scholarships, but I assume this family is betting that you don't know that so that is why they are bragging this way.
It is possible that they receive some extra merit aid compared to the next person for some leadership award or something like that which mysteriously always goes to athletes.
D3 can't give sports scholarships, but I knew a ton of football players at my D3 school who were dumber than dirt and somehow still had "academic merit" scholarships.
Literally everyone gets boatloads of merit scholarships at non-selective private colleges. The sticker price is fake. It’s like how everything at TJ Maxx appears to be 75% off suggested retail price.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this for real? OP how do you know all this?
PS - 26 is perfectly acceptable ACT score for many colleges
My child got lower and went T30 because of sports. People hate athletes.
People “hate” athletes because many would have absolutely no chance getting accepted to highly selective schools on their academic achievements, while our kids excel beyond belief and acceptance (not to mention scholarships) to these same highly selective schools are a lottery. My kid excels both in a niche sport, musical instrument AND academics.
you want a gold star, d-bag?
Ehhh, everybody would prefer having a kid who can perform surgery over a kid that can kick a ball far. No need to be butt hurt your kid falls into the latter.
lol. PP thinks med schools are full of people that never played a sport or something.
Able to “kick a ball far” and able to become a surgeon are not anywhere near mutually exclusive.
LOL, indeed. Tell your kid to enjoy soccer and then schlepping pharma to my cardiologist son.
I'm sorry that your child was too stupid to be able to handle an undergraduate premed course load and also play a sport.
It will be ironic if your cardiologist son dies of a heart attack because they are so busy trying to keep up with the academics that can't take care of their physical health.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no such thing as an athletic full ride at D3 schools. Meaning, even if you are a D1 level athlete and want to attend, say, Randolph Macon College in Ashland, they simply can not come up with any scheme to get you 4 years for free.
- signed, father of a D1 athlete that actually wanted to go to a smaller school and be a student athlete.
NP. They can certainly give you extremely significant merit aid. My kid was awarded enough in merit aid that the private D3 was cheaper than instate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Travel sports parents lie because they can’t come to terms with the last decade of carting their kids around was a complete waste.
I absolutely think it’s this. 100%.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Both of my DD's sports (softball, gymnastics) have a few kids every year who get preferential admissions at ivies and full FA because they're under the parent income threshold. I think that parents misunderstand the process if they've spent a lot of time around kids who are getting actual full ride athletic scholarships and truly believe their kids are getting a "full athletic scholarship." And then they broadcast it on instagram.
I don't argue because people who don't understand the difference between athletic scholarships and financial aid are probably not going to be receptive to whatever corrections I'd like to suggest.
Gymnastics at an Ivy?
What makes you believe that they got preferential sports admission?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Plenty of small, not prestigious, not selective D3 schools give everybody tons of merit aid.
D3 schools can't give sports scholarships, but I assume this family is betting that you don't know that so that is why they are bragging this way.
It is possible that they receive some extra merit aid compared to the next person for some leadership award or something like that which mysteriously always goes to athletes.
D3 can't give sports scholarships, but I knew a ton of football players at my D3 school who were dumber than dirt and somehow still had "academic merit" scholarships.
Anonymous wrote:Plenty of small, not prestigious, not selective D3 schools give everybody tons of merit aid.
D3 schools can't give sports scholarships, but I assume this family is betting that you don't know that so that is why they are bragging this way.
It is possible that they receive some extra merit aid compared to the next person for some leadership award or something like that which mysteriously always goes to athletes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Both of my DD's sports (softball, gymnastics) have a few kids every year who get preferential admissions at ivies and full FA because they're under the parent income threshold. I think that parents misunderstand the process if they've spent a lot of time around kids who are getting actual full ride athletic scholarships and truly believe their kids are getting a "full athletic scholarship." And then they broadcast it on instagram.
I don't argue because people who don't understand the difference between athletic scholarships and financial aid are probably not going to be receptive to whatever corrections I'd like to suggest.
Gymnastics at an Ivy?
What makes you believe that they got preferential sports admission?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this for real? OP how do you know all this?
PS - 26 is perfectly acceptable ACT score for many colleges
My child got lower and went T30 because of sports. People hate athletes.
People “hate” athletes because many would have absolutely no chance getting accepted to highly selective schools on their academic achievements, while our kids excel beyond belief and acceptance (not to mention scholarships) to these same highly selective schools are a lottery. My kid excels both in a niche sport, musical instrument AND academics.
you want a gold star, d-bag?
Ehhh, everybody would prefer having a kid who can perform surgery over a kid that can kick a ball far. No need to be butt hurt your kid falls into the latter.
lol. PP thinks med schools are full of people that never played a sport or something.
Able to “kick a ball far” and able to become a surgeon are not anywhere near mutually exclusive.
LOL, indeed. Tell your kid to enjoy soccer and then schlepping pharma to my cardiologist son.