Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:WOW.
The Deal denials are weird. I watched the last 2 years very closely. I had a kid who applied last year and had many friends whose kids applied the year before. Last year they must have taken 25 Deal kids and only a handful were even Catholic. Anyone with a mix of As/Bs and an HSPT over 70%, even 50% in some cases.
I wonder if they 1)too many kids turned them down 2)kids arrived unprepared (due to Covid) 3)along the same lines---they know that Deal was a virtual sh$%t-show last year and are purposefully not wanting to deal with kids they think will be behind (vs admitting more Catholic school kids who they know were in-person. 4)it's just a numbers game (but apps were about 1150 last year so the increase isn't that great from last year to this year).
Regardless, this is a major shift. They were typically very committed (almost strangely committed) to taking Deal kids--to the point where everyone who applied got in.
I don’t think that is the case last year. Dozens of Deal kids were denied.
I honestly don't think so. I had g/b twins in that Deal class and my kids knew several dozen who applied and about 20 who now attend. Many were not straight A students. They don't know anyone who was denied.
How would you know dozens of denials?
There were quite a few reports (maybe a dozen) last year here on DCUM showing denials.
Not from Deal. Show me the post. I'll look back as well.
Anonymous wrote:WOW.
The Deal denials are weird. I watched the last 2 years very closely. I had a kid who applied last year and had many friends whose kids applied the year before. Last year they must have taken 25 Deal kids and only a handful were even Catholic. Anyone with a mix of As/Bs and an HSPT over 70%, even 50% in some cases.
I wonder if they 1)too many kids turned them down 2)kids arrived unprepared (due to Covid) 3)along the same lines---they know that Deal was a virtual sh$%t-show last year and are purposefully not wanting to deal with kids they think will be behind (vs admitting more Catholic school kids who they know were in-person. 4)it's just a numbers game (but apps were about 1150 last year so the increase isn't that great from last year to this year).
Regardless, this is a major shift. They were typically very committed (almost strangely committed) to taking Deal kids--to the point where everyone who applied got in.
Anonymous wrote:Just checked the portal, nothing. Now, I'm anxious
Anonymous wrote:Competitive year. Straight A student, sporty, 99% HSPT - Rejected. I’m a bit shocked!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:WOW.
The Deal denials are weird. I watched the last 2 years very closely. I had a kid who applied last year and had many friends whose kids applied the year before. Last year they must have taken 25 Deal kids and only a handful were even Catholic. Anyone with a mix of As/Bs and an HSPT over 70%, even 50% in some cases.
I wonder if they 1)too many kids turned them down 2)kids arrived unprepared (due to Covid) 3)along the same lines---they know that Deal was a virtual sh$%t-show last year and are purposefully not wanting to deal with kids they think will be behind (vs admitting more Catholic school kids who they know were in-person. 4)it's just a numbers game (but apps were about 1150 last year so the increase isn't that great from last year to this year).
Regardless, this is a major shift. They were typically very committed (almost strangely committed) to taking Deal kids--to the point where everyone who applied got in.
I don’t think that is the case last year. Dozens of Deal kids were denied.
I honestly don't think so. I had g/b twins in that Deal class and my kids knew several dozen who applied and about 20 who now attend. Many were not straight A students. They don't know anyone who was denied.
How would you know dozens of denials?
There were quite a few reports (maybe a dozen) last year here on DCUM showing denials.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:WOW.
The Deal denials are weird. I watched the last 2 years very closely. I had a kid who applied last year and had many friends whose kids applied the year before. Last year they must have taken 25 Deal kids and only a handful were even Catholic. Anyone with a mix of As/Bs and an HSPT over 70%, even 50% in some cases.
I wonder if they 1)too many kids turned them down 2)kids arrived unprepared (due to Covid) 3)along the same lines---they know that Deal was a virtual sh$%t-show last year and are purposefully not wanting to deal with kids they think will be behind (vs admitting more Catholic school kids who they know were in-person. 4)it's just a numbers game (but apps were about 1150 last year so the increase isn't that great from last year to this year).
Regardless, this is a major shift. They were typically very committed (almost strangely committed) to taking Deal kids--to the point where everyone who applied got in.
I live in NoVA and don't know what DEAL is.
Local public school?
Is the relationship based on geography, relationships, both???
Either way, sorry for the disappointing news.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:WOW.
The Deal denials are weird. I watched the last 2 years very closely. I had a kid who applied last year and had many friends whose kids applied the year before. Last year they must have taken 25 Deal kids and only a handful were even Catholic. Anyone with a mix of As/Bs and an HSPT over 70%, even 50% in some cases.
I wonder if they 1)too many kids turned them down 2)kids arrived unprepared (due to Covid) 3)along the same lines---they know that Deal was a virtual sh$%t-show last year and are purposefully not wanting to deal with kids they think will be behind (vs admitting more Catholic school kids who they know were in-person. 4)it's just a numbers game (but apps were about 1150 last year so the increase isn't that great from last year to this year).
Regardless, this is a major shift. They were typically very committed (almost strangely committed) to taking Deal kids--to the point where everyone who applied got in.
I don’t think that is the case last year. Dozens of Deal kids were denied.
I honestly don't think so. I had g/b twins in that Deal class and my kids knew several dozen who applied and about 20 who now attend. Many were not straight A students. They don't know anyone who was denied.
How would you know dozens of denials?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:WOW.
The Deal denials are weird. I watched the last 2 years very closely. I had a kid who applied last year and had many friends whose kids applied the year before. Last year they must have taken 25 Deal kids and only a handful were even Catholic. Anyone with a mix of As/Bs and an HSPT over 70%, even 50% in some cases.
I wonder if they 1)too many kids turned them down 2)kids arrived unprepared (due to Covid) 3)along the same lines---they know that Deal was a virtual sh$%t-show last year and are purposefully not wanting to deal with kids they think will be behind (vs admitting more Catholic school kids who they know were in-person. 4)it's just a numbers game (but apps were about 1150 last year so the increase isn't that great from last year to this year).
Regardless, this is a major shift. They were typically very committed (almost strangely committed) to taking Deal kids--to the point where everyone who applied got in.
I don’t think that is the case last year. Dozens of Deal kids were denied.
Anonymous wrote:WOW.
The Deal denials are weird. I watched the last 2 years very closely. I had a kid who applied last year and had many friends whose kids applied the year before. Last year they must have taken 25 Deal kids and only a handful were even Catholic. Anyone with a mix of As/Bs and an HSPT over 70%, even 50% in some cases.
I wonder if they 1)too many kids turned them down 2)kids arrived unprepared (due to Covid) 3)along the same lines---they know that Deal was a virtual sh$%t-show last year and are purposefully not wanting to deal with kids they think will be behind (vs admitting more Catholic school kids who they know were in-person. 4)it's just a numbers game (but apps were about 1150 last year so the increase isn't that great from last year to this year).
Regardless, this is a major shift. They were typically very committed (almost strangely committed) to taking Deal kids--to the point where everyone who applied got in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:WOW.
The Deal denials are weird. I watched the last 2 years very closely. I had a kid who applied last year and had many friends whose kids applied the year before. Last year they must have taken 25 Deal kids and only a handful were even Catholic. Anyone with a mix of As/Bs and an HSPT over 70%, even 50% in some cases.
I wonder if they 1)too many kids turned them down 2)kids arrived unprepared (due to Covid) 3)along the same lines---they know that Deal was a virtual sh$%t-show last year and are purposefully not wanting to deal with kids they think will be behind (vs admitting more Catholic school kids who they know were in-person. 4)it's just a numbers game (but apps were about 1150 last year so the increase isn't that great from last year to this year).
Regardless, this is a major shift. They were typically very committed (almost strangely committed) to taking Deal kids--to the point where everyone who applied got in.
I don’t think that is the case last year. Dozens of Deal kids were denied.
Anonymous wrote:WOW.
The Deal denials are weird. I watched the last 2 years very closely. I had a kid who applied last year and had many friends whose kids applied the year before. Last year they must have taken 25 Deal kids and only a handful were even Catholic. Anyone with a mix of As/Bs and an HSPT over 70%, even 50% in some cases.
I wonder if they 1)too many kids turned them down 2)kids arrived unprepared (due to Covid) 3)along the same lines---they know that Deal was a virtual sh$%t-show last year and are purposefully not wanting to deal with kids they think will be behind (vs admitting more Catholic school kids who they know were in-person. 4)it's just a numbers game (but apps were about 1150 last year so the increase isn't that great from last year to this year).
Regardless, this is a major shift. They were typically very committed (almost strangely committed) to taking Deal kids--to the point where everyone who applied got in.