Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How is everyone else doing in his school? Is it the school or there’s something wrong with his application that you haven’t noticed.
This is OP. It has been tough at his school but kids have certainly got in places.
I won’t tell you his entire list in case anyone is reading this and can figure out who he is, but here is a partial.
Waitlist: Case, Tulane, VErmont
Rejected: Northeastern, Vandy, Tulane, Emory
wow, with > 1500 SAT? Isn't it back to being scored out of 1600 again these days? what the heck is going on?
This year, most colleges are either test optional or test blind. So SAT/ACT is the last and the least consideration by colleges. And to demonstrate their commitment to the test policy, colleges have to accept 30 to 50 percent among the students who did not submit a test score.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How is everyone else doing in his school? Is it the school or there’s something wrong with his application that you haven’t noticed.
This is OP. It has been tough at his school but kids have certainly got in places.
I won’t tell you his entire list in case anyone is reading this and can figure out who he is, but here is a partial.
Waitlist: Case, Tulane, VErmont
Rejected: Northeastern, Vandy, Tulane, Emory
OP, hang in there. You and your son may be pleasantly surprised with not only admission but also with a substantial merit scholarship to boot. Last year my DC, with similar stats, a single "B", and many APs, was waitlisted at Emory and Case only to then be offered admission and merit scholarships to equal COA to in-state public university. Best of luck.
Anonymous wrote:Your situation is not "horrible" and you should not be "crushed." Every year there are kids who get in nowhere.
Your kid got into one of the schools on the list that HE CREATED. It was supposed to be a school that he could see himself attending. It sounds like he is still onboard with that plan. You are one more parent on this site who thought your kid would do better. I am sorry, but this is how he did. Your job now is to convince him you are proud of what he has accomplished (he did still work hard and do well in high school, this does not change that). You need to remind him (and yourself) why you put that school on his list.
Just take a deep breath, and look forward to the next phase of your child's growth.
PS-my child got into 7 schools but PICKED the one that was ranked lowest. Different than your situation, but I still had to hold my tongue and support her. She has EXCELLED at that school. Sometimes being a big fish in a small pond can work really well. My child's confidence has increased, and she gets recognition from professors that might not happen at a school where she was the middle of the pack. This can work well, I promise you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How is everyone else doing in his school? Is it the school or there’s something wrong with his application that you haven’t noticed.
This is OP. It has been tough at his school but kids have certainly got in places.
I won’t tell you his entire list in case anyone is reading this and can figure out who he is, but here is a partial.
Waitlist: Case, Tulane, VErmont
Rejected: Northeastern, Vandy, Tulane, Emory
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, yield protection is real. Case and Emory are definitely practicing yield protection. Your DC might have a good outcome in the end from the waitlist if a commitment to a school can be demonstrated.
I agree with one PP that for the rest of the world, stats are the determining factor, and the process is more predictable.
I don't know. It really depends on what private OP is talking about. If it's ilke a Whittle, McLean School, or Burke, Emory would be a reach regardless of GPA. If she's talking St. Albans or Sidwell, that's a different story.
This is what the SAT is for. He got a 1550. How is that not an automatic in at Emory if that was his first choice?
So everyone who gets a 1550 on the SAT should be automatically admitted to a school if they declare it a first choice? That would be interesting.
No, I was saying the SAT is for when admissions don't know much about the kid's school. It's hard to compare schools and grades at different schools. So I thought that was what SAT and AP tests are for.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, yield protection is real. Case and Emory are definitely practicing yield protection. Your DC might have a good outcome in the end from the waitlist if a commitment to a school can be demonstrated.
I agree with one PP that for the rest of the world, stats are the determining factor, and the process is more predictable.
I don't know. It really depends on what private OP is talking about. If it's ilke a Whittle, McLean School, or Burke, Emory would be a reach regardless of GPA. If she's talking St. Albans or Sidwell, that's a different story.
This is what the SAT is for. He got a 1550. How is that not an automatic in at Emory if that was his first choice?
So everyone who gets a 1550 on the SAT should be automatically admitted to a school if they declare it a first choice? That would be interesting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son is in a similar boat. 3.9 GPA at a Big 3, perfect ACT score (36 on all sections), waitlisted at UChicago, WashU and Emory so far. College counselor had called Emory a match/likely for him.
Then get that damned counselor on the phone with Emory admission today and make them get him off the waitlist or he will discourage any kid from your HS from applying there in the future.
And yes, this actually matters. Colleges do not like to see applicants from good HS drop off.
Anonymous wrote:
You grossly overestimate the power that a college counselor, even from an elite school, has. With connections, they may be able to help with process, but a threat would almost certainly backfire.
Anonymous wrote:As demonstrated, Emory is having no trouble filling its spots and wouldn't without kids from school X. And, parents with kids at school X who think Emory might be a fit, aren't going to hold back based on the counselor's pride being hurt a prior year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How is everyone else doing in his school? Is it the school or there’s something wrong with his application that you haven’t noticed.
This is OP. It has been tough at his school but kids have certainly got in places.
I won’t tell you his entire list in case anyone is reading this and can figure out who he is, but here is a partial.
Waitlist: Case, Tulane, VErmont
Rejected: Northeastern, Vandy, Tulane, Emory
wow, with > 1500 SAT? Isn't it back to being scored out of 1600 again these days? what the heck is going on?
This year, most colleges are either test optional or test blind. So SAT/ACT is the last and the least consideration by colleges. And to demonstrate their commitment to the test policy, colleges have to accept 30 to 50 percent among the students who did not submit a test score.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, yield protection is real. Case and Emory are definitely practicing yield protection. Your DC might have a good outcome in the end from the waitlist if a commitment to a school can be demonstrated.
I agree with one PP that for the rest of the world, stats are the determining factor, and the process is more predictable.
I don't know. It really depends on what private OP is talking about. If it's ilke a Whittle, McLean School, or Burke, Emory would be a reach regardless of GPA. If she's talking St. Albans or Sidwell, that's a different story.
This is what the SAT is for. He got a 1550. How is that not an automatic in at Emory if that was his first choice?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I'm very sorry. That sounds really tough and the result of a lot of bad luck. I agree with all the posters telling you that you have to get a counselor or head master to work the phone for you on schools that waitlisted your kid as part of yield protection. Even public school counselors have some heft in that situation.
As a cautionary tale for others, I think it means that you have to put in the effort for demonstrated interest to your safety schools. Perhaps make sure to include your parents' alma mater and visit (for us, that was Ohio State). And you definitely have to reconsider what you think is a "match" -- schools like Emory and Tulane can never be a match, even if they were in the past and even if you know kids with lower stats get in.
This is what I don't get. Straight As, 6 APs, 1550 on the SAT, strong essay and recs. How can this not be a match at Emory, Vandy, Tulane? These schools are now filled with valedictorians with 1600s???
Fwiw, my kids are really young so I don't have a dog in this fight. I'm just baffled that a kid with straight As and 1550 can't get into Tulane now. Again, they're filling all their freshman seats with kids who were shoe-ins for Harvard 20 years ago?
I want someone to answer this too. This is really bizarre. I know a kid down the street who's mother has been bragging night and day about Emory. 1400 SAT.