Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Harvard's prestige is down. Haven't you heard?
This. Plus GDS has a large Jewish population. You'd have to be sadistic parents or self-hating Jews to spent an exorbitant amount of money to send your kid to one of the most antisemitic schools in the country. Really though for anyone it's a gamble. The reputation has changed and in some fields the name "Harvard" will end up bringing eye-rolls and concern rather than an instant opening of a door.
There are good reasons for not sending a kid to Harvard, but you are on too many fear mongering social media sites if you actually believe that Harvard is one of the most antisemitic colleges in the US.
you're right - it is second to Columbia.
try to name a school more antisemitic than those two. I bet you can't.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Harvard's prestige is down. Haven't you heard?
This. Plus GDS has a large Jewish population. You'd have to be sadistic parents or self-hating Jews to spent an exorbitant amount of money to send your kid to one of the most antisemitic schools in the country. Really though for anyone it's a gamble. The reputation has changed and in some fields the name "Harvard" will end up bringing eye-rolls and concern rather than an instant opening of a door.
There are good reasons for not sending a kid to Harvard, but you are on too many fear mongering social media sites if you actually believe that Harvard is one of the most antisemitic colleges in the US.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I guess GDS did nit have the right parent in this class. Harvard is about connections.
Exactly. No hooked applicants this year. Shockingly, Ketanji Brown Jackson's kids were both admitted in recent years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When GDS had 6 seniors matriculate at Harvard last year, was it a “substandard woke school” then too?
Be frank here. Without outing the kids, how many of the 6 were hooked? GDS has a ton of “DC famous” parents. Parents that were high up in previous administrations, journalists, authors, Supreme Court justices, Congressman, etc. Many of these are also Harvard alums.
1. legacy and child of VIP
2. legacy
3. legacy
4. legacy
5. legacy and child of dean at another top10 university
6. recruited athlete.
All were and are very smart and accomplished kids.
What GPA do you need from GDS to go to Harvard if you are one of these legacy kids
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When GDS had 6 seniors matriculate at Harvard last year, was it a “substandard woke school” then too?
Be frank here. Without outing the kids, how many of the 6 were hooked? GDS has a ton of “DC famous” parents. Parents that were high up in previous administrations, journalists, authors, Supreme Court justices, Congressman, etc. Many of these are also Harvard alums.
1. legacy and child of VIP
2. legacy
3. legacy
4. legacy
5. legacy and child of dean at another top10 university
6. recruited athlete.
All were and are very smart and accomplished kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure about Harvard, but we have a family member who works in admissions at Yale. He said these days legacy only matters if you’re a huge donor as well. FWIW.
Depends on what you call a "huge donor." This paper found that legacy students from families in the top 1 percent are five times more likely to be admitted than applicants with similar test scores. Most families at GDS are in the top 1%.
https://www.nber.org/papers/w31492
Amid widespread attention to legacy preferences in the admissions process, Chetty revealed that the advantage given to children of alumni is not uniform across the board. Chetty’s paper found that legacy students from families in the top 1 percent are five times more likely to be admitted than applicants with similar test scores.
You are assuming that all top 1% families donate similar amounts, when we know that's absolutely not the case.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure about Harvard, but we have a family member who works in admissions at Yale. He said these days legacy only matters if you’re a huge donor as well. FWIW.
Depends on what you call a "huge donor." This paper found that legacy students from families in the top 1 percent are five times more likely to be admitted than applicants with similar test scores. Most families at GDS are in the top 1%.
https://www.nber.org/papers/w31492
Amid widespread attention to legacy preferences in the admissions process, Chetty revealed that the advantage given to children of alumni is not uniform across the board. Chetty’s paper found that legacy students from families in the top 1 percent are five times more likely to be admitted than applicants with similar test scores.
Anonymous wrote:Not sure about Harvard, but we have a family member who works in admissions at Yale. He said these days legacy only matters if you’re a huge donor as well. FWIW.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When GDS had 6 seniors matriculate at Harvard last year, was it a “substandard woke school” then too?
Be frank here. Without outing the kids, how many of the 6 were hooked? GDS has a ton of “DC famous” parents. Parents that were high up in previous administrations, journalists, authors, Supreme Court justices, Congressman, etc. Many of these are also Harvard alums.