Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: She even contradicts herself and admits they make the decisions need blind in this very article: "Most knew well and good that their school wasn’t actually need blind — but they said an applicant’s ability to pay didn’t factor into the admissions equation anyway. After all, doing so was their job." Need blind!.
No, she does not contradict herself, but you can read it the way you want it, at your own peril.
She says "Most knew well and good that their school wasn’t actually need blind" but said the opposite, because that's their job, to advertise for their school and get record number of applicants and have low acceptance rate and useless rankings.
Anonymous wrote: She even contradicts herself and admits they make the decisions need blind in this very article: "Most knew well and good that their school wasn’t actually need blind — but they said an applicant’s ability to pay didn’t factor into the admissions equation anyway. After all, doing so was their job." Need blind!.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: Of the USN T20, only Wash U and UCLA are not need-blind.
https://www.ivycoach.com/the-ivy-coach-blog/college-admissions/2-reasons-need-blind-admissions-farce/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP here. I'm disappointed for my child who has perfect grades, perfect scores (ACT-presidential scholar candidate, 5s in 5 APs, 800 in 3 subject tests), strong ECs with leadership, and completed a prestigious summer program at Yale. Admitted to UMD Honors, but no B-K. Yes, I was expecting it for no reason other than me foolishly thinking how can it look any better?
Deferred from Yale EA, Michigan, Virginia. Ivy day and the rest of March looks very bleak. I can't help but to think the recommendations were weak or that college counselor approved weak essays. It's a crapshoot, it's random---until it's your child then it feels very personal and very lonely.
This is pretty much my kid. Are you in a top MOCO school? GC told us only legacies and URM got in.
Anonymous wrote: Of the USN T20, only Wash U and UCLA are not need-blind.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: At some point, stats don't mean much. No top-20 will come after your kid solely based on stats.
Yes, from that point only bank account matters.
Which colleges are you referring to specifically?
Of the USN T20, only Wash U and UCLA are not need-blind.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: At some point, stats don't mean much. No top-20 will come after your kid solely based on stats.
Yes, from that point only bank account matters.
Anonymous wrote:For many families and kids, this might be their first "rejection" ever in life (but certainly not the last one). It can be very difficult to accept. It also means as kids grow up and start moving from a small pond to bigger ponds, they will find out there are a lot of smart people out there.
Anonymous wrote: At some point, stats don't mean much. No top-20 will come after your kid solely based on stats.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The top 0.5% of students is still 15,000. That's just over last year's entire Ivy league enrollment.
Then you need to make room for URMs, football teams, legacy...etc
The number of students accepted into the T20 is far greater than 15000. I agree that stats are not the only determining factor but according to the parent this kid has demonstrated academic excellence on a consistent basis (straight As) and has strong ECs. If a kid kid like that is deferred by colleges that are in ranked in the 25-30 range.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Whatever the heck that is. And no, I'm not going to Google it.
It's a UMD thing, equivalent to UVA's Jefferson Scholars.
Sorry, dear, it's not equivalent to the Jefferson. There are far more B-K awards than the Jefferson, they're not all full tution, and it's not nearly as prestigious.
What a dumbs$$ thing to say. UVa folks never disappoint...
Except that it's true. The Jefferson is far more selective.
"more selective" just means UVa is not as generous with merit scholarships. i am not sure why that's a good thing.
+1,000,000
If the choice is between more merit aid and offering better financial aid, I'm not sure merit is a good thing. Merit aid largely feeds schools bidding against each other for students who in many cases can already afford college. Jefferson at UVA is run by an affiliated foundation, not by the university.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MOCO
1600/36
Toughest course load, perfect GPA
Great mix of ECs including sports, service and leadership.
EA into HYSP
In at Honors
No BK in portal. Maybe they all aren't out yet? Not that my kid "deserves" one, but it would be surprising that they are not in the running
Unfortunately not in the running. My kid has similar stats. Nothing in portal.
Do parents have advanced degrees? That knocks the kids out.
Why would that matter?
What?
My understanding is that the BK is geared toward certain groups and goals, and that children of highly educated parents are not thought to benefit from the BK, or utilize it, as much as others
This is wrong. Banneker was a black only scholarship program that got struck down by the Supreme Court in mid 90s which then combined with Key scholarship was given to all races based on merits. While they can't use race as determining factor, UMD still tries to maintain the spirit of Banneker scholarship. This is why sometimes, CC and other places, you will hear URM kids with lower stats offered B/K scholarships.
Your statement seems to support, not discredit the original statement.
I'm not on either side of this particular argument. However, it is misguided to think that the BK goes to MD's top scholars, that is not the case, there are specific things that the BK committee is looking for to fill the 150 spots. Not getting into the BK running should in no way concern parents about their child's other prospects.
I don't believe anyone said that or even implied that. We both have masters, our kids got it and our kids, just like many kids who get rejected, had top stats/accomplishments. UMD gets more top stat kids than seats they have for B/K. Many kids with perfect stats get rejected.
The implication throughout this thread is that it goes to the top students (stats, accomplishments, etc) that apply to UMD. This is resoundingly untrue. There are very specific categories that the BK fills. I'm sure your kids are great, but there were more accomplished seniors that were not included in the BK field.
Says who? UMD BK website says they are.
It does not.
Let it go. Bitterness is nasty.
Actually, my kid second kid got an interview. My higher stats and more accomplished, at the same point in his life, first kid did not. Second is engineering and female.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MOCO
1600/36
Toughest course load, perfect GPA
Great mix of ECs including sports, service and leadership.
EA into HYSP
In at Honors
No BK in portal. Maybe they all aren't out yet? Not that my kid "deserves" one, but it would be surprising that they are not in the running
Unfortunately not in the running. My kid has similar stats. Nothing in portal.
Do parents have advanced degrees? That knocks the kids out.
Why would that matter?
What?
My understanding is that the BK is geared toward certain groups and goals, and that children of highly educated parents are not thought to benefit from the BK, or utilize it, as much as others
This is wrong. Banneker was a black only scholarship program that got struck down by the Supreme Court in mid 90s which then combined with Key scholarship was given to all races based on merits. While they can't use race as determining factor, UMD still tries to maintain the spirit of Banneker scholarship. This is why sometimes, CC and other places, you will hear URM kids with lower stats offered B/K scholarships.
Your statement seems to support, not discredit the original statement.
I'm not on either side of this particular argument. However, it is misguided to think that the BK goes to MD's top scholars, that is not the case, there are specific things that the BK committee is looking for to fill the 150 spots. Not getting into the BK running should in no way concern parents about their child's other prospects.
I don't believe anyone said that or even implied that. We both have masters, our kids got it and our kids, just like many kids who get rejected, had top stats/accomplishments. UMD gets more top stat kids than seats they have for B/K. Many kids with perfect stats get rejected.
The implication throughout this thread is that it goes to the top students (stats, accomplishments, etc) that apply to UMD. This is resoundingly untrue. There are very specific categories that the BK fills. I'm sure your kids are great, but there were more accomplished seniors that were not included in the BK field.
Says who? UMD BK website says they are.
It does not.
Let it go. Bitterness is nasty.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Whatever the heck that is. And no, I'm not going to Google it.
It's a UMD thing, equivalent to UVA's Jefferson Scholars.
Sorry, dear, it's not equivalent to the Jefferson. There are far more B-K awards than the Jefferson, they're not all full tution, and it's not nearly as prestigious.
What a dumbs$$ thing to say. UVa folks never disappoint...
Except that it's true. The Jefferson is far more selective.
"more selective" just means UVa is not as generous with merit scholarships. i am not sure why that's a good thing.
+1,000,000
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP here. I'm disappointed for my child who has perfect grades, perfect scores (ACT-presidential scholar candidate, 5s in 5 APs, 800 in 3 subject tests), strong ECs with leadership, and completed a prestigious summer program at Yale. Admitted to UMD Honors, but no B-K. Yes, I was expecting it for no reason other than me foolishly thinking how can it look any better?
Deferred from Yale EA, Michigan, Virginia. Ivy day and the rest of March looks very bleak. I can't help but to think the recommendations were weak or that college counselor approved weak essays. It's a crapshoot, it's random---until it's your child then it feels very personal and very lonely.
Did your DC go to a public or private HS? Curious , seems very odd no acceptance to Michigan.
I am sorry I know this is hard.