Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your boy is in History, Philosophy, Classics, they will not be seen any differently. We know a boy who's deeply into masculinity and male politics, and he's getting a degree in Gender studies. He got into Harvard with below average stats, is now racking up fellowships, and is aiming for Kennedy school post-grad. If your boy is interested in Literature, Gender studies, Anthropology, Ethnic studies, they will get a lot of opportunities.
funny I see classics are being a big bump.
Anthro
Classics
English
Those are the majors. But you need a resume and transcript that supports it.
What are the research projects, activities or awards that support an application to a T10 in these areas? If my kid just really loves reading the classics (and has read many of them) and is the top English and history student at his private school, is that enough? Or does he need to have published or won national awards in these areas?
Not really at our private.
For classics:
We have EC clubs for classics - a student might lead that.
Certaman Competitions.
Indep study in classics and summer programs.
Latin teacher LOR
Or were you talking classic literature? That’s different than classics.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your boy is in History, Philosophy, Classics, they will not be seen any differently. We know a boy who's deeply into masculinity and male politics, and he's getting a degree in Gender studies. He got into Harvard with below average stats, is now racking up fellowships, and is aiming for Kennedy school post-grad. If your boy is interested in Literature, Gender studies, Anthropology, Ethnic studies, they will get a lot of opportunities.
funny I see classics are being a big bump.
Anthro
Classics
English
Those are the majors. But you need a resume and transcript that supports it.
What are the research projects, activities or awards that support an application to a T10 in these areas? If my kid just really loves reading the classics (and has read many of them) and is the top English and history student at his private school, is that enough? Or does he need to have published or won national awards in these areas?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your boy is in History, Philosophy, Classics, they will not be seen any differently. We know a boy who's deeply into masculinity and male politics, and he's getting a degree in Gender studies. He got into Harvard with below average stats, is now racking up fellowships, and is aiming for Kennedy school post-grad. If your boy is interested in Literature, Gender studies, Anthropology, Ethnic studies, they will get a lot of opportunities.
funny I see classics are being a big bump.
Anthro
Classics
English
Those are the majors. But you need a resume and transcript that supports it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:philosophy seems popular - although I'm not sure how a kid can have a deep resume on that
No bump in philosophy. It’s male dominated and lots of kids going into it now.
Anonymous wrote:philosophy seems popular - although I'm not sure how a kid can have a deep resume on that
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your boy is in History, Philosophy, Classics, they will not be seen any differently. We know a boy who's deeply into masculinity and male politics, and he's getting a degree in Gender studies. He got into Harvard with below average stats, is now racking up fellowships, and is aiming for Kennedy school post-grad. If your boy is interested in Literature, Gender studies, Anthropology, Ethnic studies, they will get a lot of opportunities.
funny I see classics are being a big bump.
Anonymous wrote:If your boy is in History, Philosophy, Classics, they will not be seen any differently. We know a boy who's deeply into masculinity and male politics, and he's getting a degree in Gender studies. He got into Harvard with below average stats, is now racking up fellowships, and is aiming for Kennedy school post-grad. If your boy is interested in Literature, Gender studies, Anthropology, Ethnic studies, they will get a lot of opportunities.
Anonymous wrote:but how else can I explain why my dd was rejected?
Anonymous wrote:I have sons. It's not what you think it is in the T1-T20s. In fact, at some of those schools the humanities--history, psych (etc) are popular pre-law choices. The bump is a fallacy at the tippy top.
Is it easier for females to get into engineering and CS programs? Sure. As a female, in that area, I can attest to it. So, yes, a boy that isn't in CS/Engineering will have an easier time at a STEM school in the same way the girls will. However, I am against trying to 'play the game'. I do like that some universities make you apply directly to the school w.out the ability to transfer into CS/engineering later to eliminate some of this game playing.