Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It doesn't help that we live in the national epicenter of helicopter parenting and psychotic levels of pressure to "succeed", defined solely as getting into a top college no matter what the cost to your mental, emotional and physical health. I grew up on the other side of the country and went to college in the west as well. None of my childhood and university friends' kids are as wound up and generally miserable as the kids in the DC metro region seem to be.
Oh yeah, absolutely no one on the West Coast is wound up about colleges, yeah right. Tell that to the kids in Atherton, or to the SoCal kids whose movie star parents are going to prison for bribing their way into USC.
I live near Atherton and this exactly! HA HA HA No, DC area doesn't have a lock on it.
I know of family moving from San Francisco area to here in order to escape the hyper competitiveness in college applications. They consider our area easier and less stressful.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, we all know life is unfairly easier for the affluent. That’s not news. But the reality is, if your kid was truly impressive, they’d get in and even possibly get a scholarship to go there. If they don’t get in, it’s often because they’re just not particularly impressive or they don’t stand out over other applicants and that IS OK. State schools are perfectly fine. Your kid will get a very good education at JMU or, gasp, even Radford. By your logic only the very rich are getting into college and that’s just not so.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are full pay, it is much easier to get in to many schools.
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/15/your-money/college-admissions-wealth.html
So when you hear people saying things like "My nephew had mediocre grades and low test scores but write this really funny essay and got in to all his schools" I have to ask -- was he full pay?
SO how do they know you are full pay at the time of the application?
THEY DON’T: people just like to claim this to make themselves feel like their kid would definitely have gotten in if, if, if...
Admissions committees have no idea how you plan to pay .
This is not true. All schools have deadlines to submit a FAFSA and CSS, if applicable. Many great schools are need aware, not need blind. Many schools don’t meet all demonstrated need. And you can’t ED unless you can make the number of the NPC work. Many people can’t. ED has a higher acceptance rate.
The SCHOOLS may be aware, that does not mean the admissions committee is
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It doesn't help that we live in the national epicenter of helicopter parenting and psychotic levels of pressure to "succeed", defined solely as getting into a top college no matter what the cost to your mental, emotional and physical health. I grew up on the other side of the country and went to college in the west as well. None of my childhood and university friends' kids are as wound up and generally miserable as the kids in the DC metro region seem to be.
Oh yeah, absolutely no one on the West Coast is wound up about colleges, yeah right. Tell that to the kids in Atherton, or to the SoCal kids whose movie star parents are going to prison for bribing their way into USC.
I live near Atherton and this exactly! HA HA HA No, DC area doesn't have a lock on it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are full pay, it is much easier to get in to many schools.
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/15/your-money/college-admissions-wealth.html
So when you hear people saying things like "My nephew had mediocre grades and low test scores but write this really funny essay and got in to all his schools" I have to ask -- was he full pay?
SO how do they know you are full pay at the time of the application?
THEY DON’T: people just like to claim this to make themselves feel like their kid would definitely have gotten in if, if, if...
Admissions committees have no idea how you plan to pay .
This is not true. All schools have deadlines to submit a FAFSA and CSS, if applicable. Many great schools are need aware, not need blind. Many schools don’t meet all demonstrated need. And you can’t ED unless you can make the number of the NPC work. Many people can’t. ED has a higher acceptance rate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are full pay, it is much easier to get in to many schools.
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/15/your-money/college-admissions-wealth.html
So when you hear people saying things like "My nephew had mediocre grades and low test scores but write this really funny essay and got in to all his schools" I have to ask -- was he full pay?
SO how do they know you are full pay at the time of the application?
THEY DON’T: people just like to claim this to make themselves feel like their kid would definitely have gotten in if, if, if...
Admissions committees have no idea how you plan to pay .
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It doesn't help that we live in the national epicenter of helicopter parenting and psychotic levels of pressure to "succeed", defined solely as getting into a top college no matter what the cost to your mental, emotional and physical health. I grew up on the other side of the country and went to college in the west as well. None of my childhood and university friends' kids are as wound up and generally miserable as the kids in the DC metro region seem to be.
Oh yeah, absolutely no one on the West Coast is wound up about colleges, yeah right. Tell that to the kids in Atherton, or to the SoCal kids whose movie star parents are going to prison for bribing their way into USC.