Anonymous wrote:Jail.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1560 SAT / 36 ACT, 3.96 UW, incredible ECs.
Last year he was rejected at 4 Ivies.
Accepted into our State School (Florida) and all of his safeties (Pepperdine, SMU, Tulane).
After touring them all again and evaluating the Merit offers, he selected Pepperdine on basically a full ride.
No full ride at Tulane?
Anonymous wrote:Mine is at Wisconsin, which was a safety. He has said a couple of times that if he had known this was where he was going, he would have had a little more fun in high school and wouldn't have killed himself taking such hard classes. In the end, no one understood what happened -- other than the two rounds of ED didn't work out and then he was stuck in the seventh circle of waitlist hell until early July. He got into one or two schools that might be considered better than Wisconsin but there are more opportunities in his major in Madison. I wish the process hadn't sucked so much and I wish he had been more proud of how it turned out but at the end of the day it doesn't really matter and he is happy.
Anonymous wrote:1560 SAT / 36 ACT, 3.96 UW, incredible ECs.
Last year he was rejected at 4 Ivies.
Accepted into our State School (Florida) and all of his safeties (Pepperdine, SMU, Tulane).
After touring them all again and evaluating the Merit offers, he selected Pepperdine on basically a full ride.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The framing of OP’s question highlights everything that’s wrong with the college admissions narrative these days.
and you have nothing but criticism to offer, I see. Why comment at all? Did that post give you a fleeting sense of superiority?
Anonymous wrote:UVA. He doesn’t hate the experience, but is struggling to find a serious peer group, looking to transfer.
Anonymous wrote:A close friend’s high score DC made the mistake of applying to all super reaches with one safety and ended up at the safety (RIT), which is still an excellent school.
Anonymous wrote:The framing of OP’s question highlights everything that’s wrong with the college admissions narrative these days.