Anonymous wrote:Clearly you can't read. No one said legacy boosts don't exist anymore. It's just that they used to be even bigger.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The days of being able to get on on legacy basis alone ended a long time ago.
One would hope. The point is the legacies get in when there is tie between candidates. In practice, this means the non-legacies have to be better than the legacies to get in.
Applying to college as a legacy is like having a superpower. It has been estimated to double or quadruple one’s chances of getting into a highly selective school, and has been found to be roughly equivalent to a 160-point boost on the SAT. At the most selective institutions in the United States, it’s typical for 10 to 15 percent of students to have a parent who also attended.
Anonymous wrote:The days of being able to get on on legacy basis alone ended a long time ago.
Anonymous wrote:Being a legacy is not all that important unless you also give substantial money to your school. No reason for a college to reward or perpetuate years of of stinginess.
Anonymous wrote:And don't forget some families will be legacy at multiple Ivies. In my DC's PK class, there are parents who have 6 Ivy degrees between the two of them (parents who have two graduate degrees, usually, or a degree like a Penn M&T that is dual Wharton / School of Engineering), thus often covering four different schools.
For example: Dartmouth undergrad, Harvard Law married to Princeton undergrad, Yale Law. That greatly increases the legacy chances of a kid, as well as increasing the likelihood that one of the legacy schools is genuinely a great fit and first choice for them.
Anonymous wrote:And don't forget some families will be legacy at multiple Ivies. In my DC's PK class, there are parents who have 6 Ivy degrees between the two of them (parents who have two graduate degrees, usually, or a degree like a Penn M&T that is dual Wharton / School of Engineering), thus often covering four different schools.
For example: Dartmouth undergrad, Harvard Law married to Princeton undergrad, Yale Law. That greatly increases the legacy chances of a kid, as well as increasing the likelihood that one of the legacy schools is genuinely a great fit and first choice for them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sidwell and St. Albans appear downright provincial compared with the NYC private schools such as the Dalton school and Horace Mann. Their social circles are connected to the elite New England boarding schools. The DC privates are their own little micro-bubble. It is what it is I guess.
Seriously, who cares?
Who cares? Likely someone whose child didn’t get in. The WSJ did an an analysis of high schools who got the most students into HYPS and IIRC STA was eleventh in the country which was behind the elite NYC schools but obviously not by much.