Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hopkins is much more lax with their D1 lax admissions standard than their standards for D3 sports.
The bigger the stage in the sport, the more relaxed the standard tends to be. On the high academic side, that translates to power 5 schools like Stanford, Northwestern, Vandy, and Duke having more admissions flexibility than the athletically less competitive Ivy League schools, which have more flexibility than the D3 schools like MIT, Chicago, Wash U, Swarthmore, Amherst, Williams, most of Hopkins, ect.
For non revenue sports, Stanford has a higher minimum score threshold than the Ivy League. No index though, so you could have a team with lots of kids who scored in the 1300-1350 range, where Ivy teams will have a handful who scored in the 1200-1250 range and the majority much higher.
This is true and has been so since I was a D1 athletic stud
In your dreams buddy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS is being recruited by JHU. Was told by the coach that they want to see 1500/34 and top 10% of HS class.
JHU = D3
Not the same answer for D1 schools.
We were told the same for the Ivies (D1 schools).
So if I am understanding correctly, despite the test-optional policy, we should expect that the Ivy League schools reaching out to our student-athlete ("top" sport like football/basketball/lacrosse) will request ACT/SAT scores? Also, when should we expect Ivy League recruiting to end practically speaking? End of junior year? End of first semester senior year?
Thank you!
I love how uiy lumped lacrosse as a top sport![]()
At many schools it is a top sport but (other than at JHU) not to the extent of football or hoops.
"Top sport" in what way? Maybe there would be a lot of interest in playing it at certain schools, but I don't see it as a top revenue generator.
Do a lot of these athletes continue to play their sport year after year once admitted? They're not getting a scholarship for it, and I'm assuming they can't be dismissed for choosing to quit. I wonder if some use it for a bump in admissions and then quit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hopkins is much more lax with their D1 lax admissions standard than their standards for D3 sports.
The bigger the stage in the sport, the more relaxed the standard tends to be. On the high academic side, that translates to power 5 schools like Stanford, Northwestern, Vandy, and Duke having more admissions flexibility than the athletically less competitive Ivy League schools, which have more flexibility than the D3 schools like MIT, Chicago, Wash U, Swarthmore, Amherst, Williams, most of Hopkins, ect.
For non revenue sports, Stanford has a higher minimum score threshold than the Ivy League. No index though, so you could have a team with lots of kids who scored in the 1300-1350 range, where Ivy teams will have a handful who scored in the 1200-1250 range and the majority much higher.
This is true and has been so since I was a D1 athletic stud
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hopkins is much more lax with their D1 lax admissions standard than their standards for D3 sports.
The bigger the stage in the sport, the more relaxed the standard tends to be. On the high academic side, that translates to power 5 schools like Stanford, Northwestern, Vandy, and Duke having more admissions flexibility than the athletically less competitive Ivy League schools, which have more flexibility than the D3 schools like MIT, Chicago, Wash U, Swarthmore, Amherst, Williams, most of Hopkins, ect.
For non revenue sports, Stanford has a higher minimum score threshold than the Ivy League. No index though, so you could have a team with lots of kids who scored in the 1300-1350 range, where Ivy teams will have a handful who scored in the 1200-1250 range and the majority much higher.
Anonymous wrote:Hopkins is much more lax with their D1 lax admissions standard than their standards for D3 sports.
The bigger the stage in the sport, the more relaxed the standard tends to be. On the high academic side, that translates to power 5 schools like Stanford, Northwestern, Vandy, and Duke having more admissions flexibility than the athletically less competitive Ivy League schools, which have more flexibility than the D3 schools like MIT, Chicago, Wash U, Swarthmore, Amherst, Williams, most of Hopkins, ect.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS is being recruited by JHU. Was told by the coach that they want to see 1500/34 and top 10% of HS class.
JHU = D3
Not the same answer for D1 schools.
We were told the same for the Ivies (D1 schools).
So if I am understanding correctly, despite the test-optional policy, we should expect that the Ivy League schools reaching out to our student-athlete ("top" sport like football/basketball/lacrosse) will request ACT/SAT scores? Also, when should we expect Ivy League recruiting to end practically speaking? End of junior year? End of first semester senior year?
Thank you!
I love how uiy lumped lacrosse as a top sport![]()
At many schools it is a top sport but (other than at JHU) not to the extent of football or hoops.
"Top sport" in what way? Maybe there would be a lot of interest in playing it at certain schools, but I don't see it as a top revenue generator.
Do a lot of these athletes continue to play their sport year after year once admitted? They're not getting a scholarship for it, and I'm assuming they can't be dismissed for choosing to quit. I wonder if some use it for a bump in admissions and then quit.
LACROSSE IS GOD at Hopkins. Hopkins Homecoming is centered around a Lacrosse game, not football. Homecoming weekend was the big lacrosse game. Football is not a big deal at hopkins---at all.
My husband is an alum.
Well, they are actually good at lacrosse, so why not?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS is being recruited by JHU. Was told by the coach that they want to see 1500/34 and top 10% of HS class.
JHU = D3
Not the same answer for D1 schools.
We were told the same for the Ivies (D1 schools).
So if I am understanding correctly, despite the test-optional policy, we should expect that the Ivy League schools reaching out to our student-athlete ("top" sport like football/basketball/lacrosse) will request ACT/SAT scores? Also, when should we expect Ivy League recruiting to end practically speaking? End of junior year? End of first semester senior year?
Thank you!
I love how uiy lumped lacrosse as a top sport![]()
At many schools it is a top sport but (other than at JHU) not to the extent of football or hoops.
"Top sport" in what way? Maybe there would be a lot of interest in playing it at certain schools, but I don't see it as a top revenue generator.
Do a lot of these athletes continue to play their sport year after year once admitted? They're not getting a scholarship for it, and I'm assuming they can't be dismissed for choosing to quit. I wonder if some use it for a bump in admissions and then quit.
Your kids must not be athletes. Nobody does all the years of work needed to get recruited to play at college level just so they can get into a good school and then quit. The few that quit probably got injured.
People can get burned out, especially if they have a heavy academic load. It's not like they're typically going to Ivies as a stepping stone to going pro.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS is being recruited by JHU. Was told by the coach that they want to see 1500/34 and top 10% of HS class.
JHU = D3
Not the same answer for D1 schools.
We were told the same for the Ivies (D1 schools).
So if I am understanding correctly, despite the test-optional policy, we should expect that the Ivy League schools reaching out to our student-athlete ("top" sport like football/basketball/lacrosse) will request ACT/SAT scores? Also, when should we expect Ivy League recruiting to end practically speaking? End of junior year? End of first semester senior year?
Thank you!
I love how uiy lumped lacrosse as a top sport![]()
At many schools it is a top sport but (other than at JHU) not to the extent of football or hoops.
"Top sport" in what way? Maybe there would be a lot of interest in playing it at certain schools, but I don't see it as a top revenue generator.
Do a lot of these athletes continue to play their sport year after year once admitted? They're not getting a scholarship for it, and I'm assuming they can't be dismissed for choosing to quit. I wonder if some use it for a bump in admissions and then quit.
Your kids must not be athletes. Nobody does all the years of work needed to get recruited to play at college level just so they can get into a good school and then quit. The few that quit probably got injured.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS is being recruited by JHU. Was told by the coach that they want to see 1500/34 and top 10% of HS class.
JHU = D3
Not the same answer for D1 schools.
We were told the same for the Ivies (D1 schools).
So if I am understanding correctly, despite the test-optional policy, we should expect that the Ivy League schools reaching out to our student-athlete ("top" sport like football/basketball/lacrosse) will request ACT/SAT scores? Also, when should we expect Ivy League recruiting to end practically speaking? End of junior year? End of first semester senior year?
Thank you!
I love how uiy lumped lacrosse as a top sport![]()
At many schools it is a top sport but (other than at JHU) not to the extent of football or hoops.
"Top sport" in what way? Maybe there would be a lot of interest in playing it at certain schools, but I don't see it as a top revenue generator.
Do a lot of these athletes continue to play their sport year after year once admitted? They're not getting a scholarship for it, and I'm assuming they can't be dismissed for choosing to quit. I wonder if some use it for a bump in admissions and then quit.
LACROSSE IS GOD at Hopkins. Hopkins Homecoming is centered around a Lacrosse game, not football. Homecoming weekend was the big lacrosse game. Football is not a big deal at hopkins---at all.
My husband is an alum.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS is being recruited by JHU. Was told by the coach that they want to see 1500/34 and top 10% of HS class.
JHU = D3
Not the same answer for D1 schools.
We were told the same for the Ivies (D1 schools).
So if I am understanding correctly, despite the test-optional policy, we should expect that the Ivy League schools reaching out to our student-athlete ("top" sport like football/basketball/lacrosse) will request ACT/SAT scores? Also, when should we expect Ivy League recruiting to end practically speaking? End of junior year? End of first semester senior year?
Thank you!
I love how uiy lumped lacrosse as a top sport![]()
Anonymous wrote:Hopkins is much more lax with their D1 lax admissions standard than their standards for D3 sports.
The bigger the stage in the sport, the more relaxed the standard tends to be. On the high academic side, that translates to power 5 schools like Stanford, Northwestern, Vandy, and Duke having more admissions flexibility than the athletically less competitive Ivy League schools, which have more flexibility than the D3 schools like MIT, Chicago, Wash U, Swarthmore, Amherst, Williams, most of Hopkins, ect.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS is being recruited by JHU. Was told by the coach that they want to see 1500/34 and top 10% of HS class.
JHU = D3
Not the same answer for D1 schools.
We were told the same for the Ivies (D1 schools).
So if I am understanding correctly, despite the test-optional policy, we should expect that the Ivy League schools reaching out to our student-athlete ("top" sport like football/basketball/lacrosse) will request ACT/SAT scores? Also, when should we expect Ivy League recruiting to end practically speaking? End of junior year? End of first semester senior year?
Thank you!
Anonymous wrote:^^
How are northwestern and Vande in the power 5?