Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tulane
Wash U
Boston College
Villanova
Fordham
Pitt
Providence
DePaul
Loyola MD
Other than Wash U, this list is safeties for OP's kid. In fact, kid would likely get full tuition at Villanova (if she could convince them she would accept), Fordham, etc. Be serious.
Anonymous wrote:Tulane
Wash U
Boston College
Villanova
Fordham
Pitt
Providence
DePaul
Loyola MD
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Reaches: Brown, Yale, Harvey Mudd, Stanford (stay away from Cornell, Dartmouth, Penn, Harvard, Duke).
Targets: Hamilton, Haverford, Middlebury, Bowdoin, Bates, Davidson, Wake, W&M
Safeties: Beloit, St. Olaf, Denison, Kenyon, Colby
(Given stats and a small elite private school, these targets are different than what many would suggest for a public school student).
Colby is not a safety, and it’s in the middle of nowhere.
Colby is 100% a safety for this kid from a strong private. They will take down to a 3.4 or so from ours. My kid was one of them this year.
Colby takes the lower 1/3 of our private too.
How many were ED? How do you think Colby maintains that low admit rate? They don’t produce a CDS but I suspect they are heavy in ED and savage in RD.
Anonymous wrote:- Ideal small to medium-sized interdisciplinary college in a city or suburb
- chemistry major, also wants to take classes in AI and applied math
- wants high exposure to professors and research opportunities
- has strived in high rigor environment but doesn’t want the kind of place where fun goes to die or everyone is studying for grades
- collaborative, highly intellectual culture where students love learning, not all about jockeying for IB connections or the next IPO opportunity
- Female, unhooked, non URM, from a top private, full pay, quiet nerdy but has lot of friends
- 1580, 3.88 from a school that’s known for rigor/doesn't grade inflate (no one gets a 4.0), decent ECs (STEM leadership, part time job year round, volunteer year round, some regional math and writing awards)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:- Ideal small to medium-sized interdisciplinary college in a city or suburb
- chemistry major, also wants to take classes in AI and applied math
- wants high exposure to professors and research opportunities
- has strived in high rigor environment but doesn’t want the kind of place where fun goes to die or everyone is studying for grades
- collaborative, highly intellectual culture where students love learning, not all about jockeying for IB connections or the next IPO opportunity
- Female, unhooked, non URM, from a top private, full pay, quiet nerdy but has lot of friends
- 1580, 3.88 from a school that’s known for rigor/doesn't grade inflate (no one gets a 4.0), decent ECs (STEM leadership, part time job year round, volunteer year round, some regional math and writing awards)
I love how every post feels compelled to point out that their private school does not inflate grades. The fact is, virtually all schools do, private or public.
Cathedral famously does not. Her description sounds very much like NCS.
- Ideal small to medium-sized interdisciplinary college in a city or suburb
- chemistry major, also wants to take classes in AI and applied math
- wants high exposure to professors and research opportunities
- has strived in high rigor environment but doesn’t want the kind of place where fun goes to die or everyone is studying for grades
- collaborative, highly intellectual culture where students love learning, not all about jockeying for IB connections or the next IPO opportunity
- Female, unhooked, non URM, from a top private, full pay, quiet nerdy but has lot of friends
- 1580, 3.88 from a school that’s known for rigor/doesn't grade inflate (no one gets a 4.0), decent ECs (STEM leadership, part time job year round, volunteer year round, some regional math and writing awards)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:- Ideal small to medium-sized interdisciplinary college in a city or suburb
- chemistry major, also wants to take classes in AI and applied math
- wants high exposure to professors and research opportunities
- has strived in high rigor environment but doesn’t want the kind of place where fun goes to die or everyone is studying for grades
- collaborative, highly intellectual culture where students love learning, not all about jockeying for IB connections or the next IPO opportunity
- Female, unhooked, non URM, from a top private, full pay, quiet nerdy but has lot of friends
- 1580, 3.88 from a school that’s known for rigor/doesn't grade inflate (no one gets a 4.0), decent ECs (STEM leadership, part time job year round, volunteer year round, some regional math and writing awards)
I love how every post feels compelled to point out that their private school does not inflate grades. The fact is, virtually all schools do, private or public.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some of this depends on whether she is interested in ED/REA. Some of these schools take a lot of kids in early rounds.
Reach - brown, northwestern, Vanderbilt, Pomona
Ed2 if willing washu
Target: William and Mary, Wesleyan
Likely: macalester, Carleton, haverford, Bryn mawr
No to swat and Chicago
OP: which ones give an advantage in ED/EA?
DD doesn’t plan to do Yale/ Brown type schools that some posters suggested above for EA/ED. She’s a very mature, rational kid. She knows as an unhooked applicant, her chance of an Ivy is very low, so she doesn’t want to waste an ED/EA on Yale/Princeton (no interest in Harvard) type school and end up having worse odds in RD at a school she could had a higher chance getting in early.