Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any more than 10 seems absurd - how could these kids even know if they like that many schools. We applied to 10 and honestly that was to many...there were easily 3-4 that I don't think my son would have ever gone to.
My kid did not apply to single safety. Applied to 10 matches and 2 reaches. Never know what happens when applying to a bunch of schools with 40-60% acceptance rates. We also needed some merit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:18: 9 acceptances, 6 waitlists, 3 rejections, attending an Ivy
Why do posters always have to say “attending an Ivy?” Why can’t you just name the school? You’re so weird. You really think that you’re outing someone by saying saying Cornell or whatever?
I always assume Cornell or Dartmouth when someone says “an Ivy”.
That wasn’t me, didn’t have a kid this last cycle, but I’ve said it and it’s not one of those. Reason being people are just vicious on here and sometimes less is more. If they attended Duke or Hopkins I wouldn’t say either, I’d just say T10. I only use it as a general selectivity term which is what I think people are generally trying to gauge.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any more than 10 seems absurd - how could these kids even know if they like that many schools. We applied to 10 and honestly that was to many...there were easily 3-4 that I don't think my son would have ever gone to.
Did you not read the comments? People explained they apply to 20 because (1) results are unpredictable - they don’t have good Naviance data, and (2) they’re looking the best financial package/merit.
So, actually, for many people it makes quite a bit of sense to apply to 20.
Anonymous wrote:Any more than 10 seems absurd - how could these kids even know if they like that many schools. We applied to 10 and honestly that was to many...there were easily 3-4 that I don't think my son would have ever gone to.
Anonymous wrote:Any more than 10 seems absurd - how could these kids even know if they like that many schools. We applied to 10 and honestly that was to many...there were easily 3-4 that I don't think my son would have ever gone to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:2023: 20 (including 12 reaches, after ED1 deferral). At ivy.
2025: 22 (including 14 reaches, after ED1 deferral). Enrolled at T10.
Why so many reaches?
Better question: how many acceptances from the reach schools?
But if the reach the kid eventually ends up at was a high reach, isn’t one reach acceptance enough?
That’s the whole point of the 20+ apps with 10-13 reaches, right? Just to get one reach?
That's the point but in practice it doesn't seem to work that well. It's hard to make a genuine and persuasive case for a particular school if you're applying to 20+. A lot of kids who do that end up getting into no reaches. And getting rejected from that many is very demoralizing. To be rejected from three reaches is kind of like, oh well, but there's a psychic cost to opening 20 rejections.
Anonymous wrote:Any more than 10 seems absurd - how could these kids even know if they like that many schools. We applied to 10 and honestly that was to many...there were easily 3-4 that I don't think my son would have ever gone to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:2023: 20 (including 12 reaches, after ED1 deferral). At ivy.
2025: 22 (including 14 reaches, after ED1 deferral). Enrolled at T10.
Why so many reaches?
Better question: how many acceptances from the reach schools?
But if the reach the kid eventually ends up at was a high reach, isn’t one reach acceptance enough?
That’s the whole point of the 20+ apps with 10-13 reaches, right? Just to get one reach?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:18: 9 acceptances, 6 waitlists, 3 rejections, attending an Ivy
Why do posters always have to say “attending an Ivy?” Why can’t you just name the school? You’re so weird. You really think that you’re outing someone by saying saying Cornell or whatever?
I always assume Cornell or Dartmouth when someone says “an Ivy”.
That wasn’t me, didn’t have a kid this last cycle, but I’ve said it and it’s not one of those. Reason being people are just vicious on here and sometimes less is more. If they attended Duke or Hopkins I wouldn’t say either, I’d just say T10. I only use it as a general selectivity term which is what I think people are generally trying to gauge.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:18: 9 acceptances, 6 waitlists, 3 rejections, attending an Ivy
Why do posters always have to say “attending an Ivy?” Why can’t you just name the school? You’re so weird. You really think that you’re outing someone by saying saying Cornell or whatever?
I always assume Cornell or Dartmouth when someone says “an Ivy”.