Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents and counselors need to change the lingo. Stop calling schools "safeties." These are schools that you are likely to get into and so likely the school you will go to. If you are in the middle 50th, then you and a bunch of others just like you are fighting for those spots, but there isn't enough room for all of you.
One college counselor I heard interviewed calls them exactly that, "likelies"
Anonymous wrote:I think y’all are being needlessly tough on OP/her daughter.
The amount of energy it takes to be a top high school student at a top school (especially in an intense area like DCUM-land!) is immense. One’s entire identity is wrapped up in being a good student and striving for the best. The sum of a full school day, extracurriculars, homework, basic self care, etc. is more intense — and involves more competing priorities — than most other busy periods in ones life.
OP’s daughter probably realized she worked to the point of deteriorating her QOL. She has a right to be frustrated with the situation even if the outcome is objectively fantastic.
Anonymous wrote:OP,
Please consider encouraging your DD not to go to W&M. My DC is a Monroe scholar too and has a number of excellent choices. I would be thrilled if they chose W&M with this honor (and this not about the cost--we have no problem paying for an Ivy) and would prefer they attended with students who have the right attitude.
-mom with two Ivy degrees (who perhaps knows better because I've attended one)
Anonymous wrote:I am with you OP. It has been tremendously stressful My "big 3" DD is very disappointed with her options (what her counselor said were foundational) and assumes she will be rejected by the remaining 4 she is waiting to hear from. I told her that I had to be realistic and that it's a lottery, and I just don't know. She may or may not get in. Not to take it personally.
She already talks of transferring. I told her that wherever she ends up, it might not be her dream school but if she likes the people she will not want to transfer, wherever she goes she will learn a lot, and it will all be fine.
She worked SO HARD in HS to get the grades, found some great ECs that she was truly interested in, not just padding. I feel for her. She is incredibly disappointed to the point of tears. I know this is a real world, teachable moment. But it is SO hard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This PP’s reply is simply amazing in its generosity and compassion:
Yes, it's a very hard admissions year out there. Maybe your DD would feel better knowing that just like she was waitlisted some places, ridiculous numbers of students who applied to Grinnell, for example, were waitlisted this year, including my senior with higher GPA and test scores. (I'm sure people could say the same for the other "safeties" on her list.) Supposedly Grinnell got 10,000 applications for fewer than 500 spots So while your DD treated it like a safety, it was a lottery for even those with high stats, and she got in. Congratulations!
If my kid were waitlisted with higher scores, and then somebody came on here complaining about her DD’s acceptance, I wouldn’t be nearly as kind. Seriously. This is crazy.
And FWIW, a true safety is a college you’re happy to attend.
Just to clarify something, a little off topic. Just because the class-size is 500, doesn't mean they only take 500. I would guess yield at Grinnel to be between 20 and 25%. So it's more like 10,000 apps for 2,000/2,500 acceptances. Still, acceptance rate is low and it stinks to see someone like OP complaining that it's the best her DD could do, when so many would gladly be in her position.
Anonymous wrote:My daughter is one of the average kids at our “Big 5”. Thought she’d be recruited for sports but it hasn’t worked out. Her reach schools aren’t close to being on the same level as your safeties. I will never stand around with DC moms and be able to brag about her school acceptances. I would get pity, all that money for “those” schools....
But she is excited about going to college and thinks that she’ll be happy at all the schools we’ve looked at, she can’t wait to play her sport for a club or intramural team since she can’t get on the varsity team. She is excited to find her place no matter where she ends up. And get a roommate, meet kids from other places, figure out the tutoring services, and get Chik FIL A (so many CFAs!) And that makes me so proud of her.
Anonymous wrote:This PP’s reply is simply amazing in its generosity and compassion:
Yes, it's a very hard admissions year out there. Maybe your DD would feel better knowing that just like she was waitlisted some places, ridiculous numbers of students who applied to Grinnell, for example, were waitlisted this year, including my senior with higher GPA and test scores. (I'm sure people could say the same for the other "safeties" on her list.) Supposedly Grinnell got 10,000 applications for fewer than 500 spots So while your DD treated it like a safety, it was a lottery for even those with high stats, and she got in. Congratulations!
If my kid were waitlisted with higher scores, and then somebody came on here complaining about her DD’s acceptance, I wouldn’t be nearly as kind. Seriously. This is crazy.
And FWIW, a true safety is a college you’re happy to attend.