Anonymous wrote:Everyone who doesn’t agree with your echo chamber of mediocre in denial moms is a troll or has anger issues. Or just calling a spade a spade. If your kid can’t produce 4s and 5s on AP exams and a top notch SAT or ACT you know full well your kid isn’t bright. We see through your self-serving BS. Congrats on conning them into whatever college on their fake GPA alone — and then watching them predictably self destruct on campus when you weren’t around to helicopter and run every aspect of their life. Regressing to the mean in some easy joke major.
Anonymous wrote:Einstein: 8% of students with a 4.51+
Churchill: 29% of students with a 4.51+
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love deluded parents claiming AP and SAT exams are fake and mean nothing... but their kid's inflated perfect GPA is a 100% spot on assessment of their kid's genius. lol![]()
And spare us the vomiting, anxiety and whatever other pseudo excuses you can come up with. As if becoming a nervous freak before something important is in any way an asset to a university or a potential employer. Reminds me in the early 90s everyone "barely slept" or "partied" the night before the SAT when explaining their score.![]()
Your child just isn't that special. And I love y'all come over the top to say but but but their college GPA is great, too! As if it's difficult to make straight As in some weak major. Have junior go sit for the LSAT, MCAT, or GMAT and the low score will again expose your kid is just simply not very bright.
Mmkay. I'm sure you know that your kid's uber-prepped SAT/ACT score, combined with multiple retakes, does not make them a genius. You're deluded if you think a high test score means your child is special.
NP DC got high 1500 in the first sitting, but sound like your smart high GPA kid can’t get a decent scores with prep and multiple retakes? Why are you so mad at PP otherwise?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love deluded parents claiming AP and SAT exams are fake and mean nothing... but their kid's inflated perfect GPA is a 100% spot on assessment of their kid's genius. lol![]()
And spare us the vomiting, anxiety and whatever other pseudo excuses you can come up with. As if becoming a nervous freak before something important is in any way an asset to a university or a potential employer. Reminds me in the early 90s everyone "barely slept" or "partied" the night before the SAT when explaining their score.![]()
Your child just isn't that special. And I love y'all come over the top to say but but but their college GPA is great, too! As if it's difficult to make straight As in some weak major. Have junior go sit for the LSAT, MCAT, or GMAT and the low score will again expose your kid is just simply not very bright.
Mmkay. I'm sure you know that your kid's uber-prepped SAT/ACT score, combined with multiple retakes, does not make them a genius. You're deluded if you think a high test score means your child is special.
Anonymous wrote:Everyone who doesn’t agree with your echo chamber of mediocre in denial moms is a troll or has anger issues. Or just calling a spade a spade. If your kid can’t produce 4s and 5s on AP exams and a top notch SAT or ACT you know full well your kid isn’t bright. We see through your self-serving BS. Congrats on conning them into whatever college on their fake GPA alone — and then watching them predictably self destruct on campus when you weren’t around to helicopter and run every aspect of their life. Regressing to the mean in some easy joke major.
Anonymous wrote:Fascinating how every bright teen who scores higher than your mediocre teen on the ACT or SAT did so with test prep and retakes — yet your kid’s pumped GPA is most certainly the result of fake inflated grades, low rigor, unlimited retakes, extra credit, turning in late assignments for full credit, and grade grubbing at the end of the semester.
Anonymous wrote:Everyone who doesn’t agree with your echo chamber of mediocre in denial moms is a troll or has anger issues. Or just calling a spade a spade. If your kid can’t produce 4s and 5s on AP exams and a top notch SAT or ACT you know full well your kid isn’t bright. We see through your self-serving BS. Congrats on conning them into whatever college on their fake GPA alone — and then watching them predictably self destruct on campus when you weren’t around to helicopter and run every aspect of their life. Regressing to the mean in some easy joke major.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love deluded parents claiming AP and SAT exams are fake and mean nothing... but their kid's inflated perfect GPA is a 100% spot on assessment of their kid's genius. lol![]()
And spare us the vomiting, anxiety and whatever other pseudo excuses you can come up with. As if becoming a nervous freak before something important is in any way an asset to a university or a potential employer. Reminds me in the early 90s everyone "barely slept" or "partied" the night before the SAT when explaining their score.![]()
Your child just isn't that special. And I love y'all come over the top to say but but but their college GPA is great, too! As if it's difficult to make straight As in some weak major. Have junior go sit for the LSAT, MCAT, or GMAT and the low score will again expose your kid is just simply not very bright.
Sounds like you have some anger issues to work out, are you seeing a therapist?
Anonymous wrote:I love deluded parents claiming AP and SAT exams are fake and mean nothing... but their kid's inflated perfect GPA is a 100% spot on assessment of their kid's genius. lol![]()
And spare us the vomiting, anxiety and whatever other pseudo excuses you can come up with. As if becoming a nervous freak before something important is in any way an asset to a university or a potential employer. Reminds me in the early 90s everyone "barely slept" or "partied" the night before the SAT when explaining their score.![]()
Your child just isn't that special. And I love y'all come over the top to say but but but their college GPA is great, too! As if it's difficult to make straight As in some weak major. Have junior go sit for the LSAT, MCAT, or GMAT and the low score will again expose your kid is just simply not very bright.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you ever seen anybody post in the College and University Discussion who doesn't claim their kid has at least a 3.9? I have not.
Everyone on CC is a crazy striver -- lots of lying, rounding up and conflating GPA with weighted GPA. See also how they "super score" exam scores. I remember there was a URM teen a few years ago who was spamming a detailed play by play of his AP, SAT subject, SAT/ACT scores and applications. Super attention craving. He ended up getting into Ivies. Then he asked the moderator to delete all of his old posts, I suspect because he realized he clearly only got into such an elite college because of one reason and didn't want his all of totally mediocre test scores on the record. The moderator refused to delete them per website policy.
Anonymous wrote:I love deluded parents claiming AP and SAT exams are fake and mean nothing... but their kid's inflated perfect GPA is a 100% spot on assessment of their kid's genius. lol![]()
And spare us the vomiting, anxiety and whatever other pseudo excuses you can come up with. As if becoming a nervous freak before something important is in any way an asset to a university or a potential employer. Reminds me in the early 90s everyone "barely slept" or "partied" the night before the SAT when explaining their score.![]()
Your child just isn't that special. And I love y'all come over the top to say but but but their college GPA is great, too! As if it's difficult to make straight As in some weak major. Have junior go sit for the LSAT, MCAT, or GMAT and the low score will again expose your kid is just simply not very bright.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh and yes he did get As in his APs and all 4 and 5 on his AP tests, including the one he threw up before. Its the pressure of the big TEST the Sat and the ACT.
+1
The pressure of the ACT/SAT is tremendous.
I told DD she should take it easy, no need to be stressed, it’s a test you can retake every month.
If your family has money to burn.
Anonymous wrote:Have you ever seen anybody post in the College and University Discussion who doesn't claim their kid has at least a 3.9? I have not.