Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:i suspect that a student from the DC area might get a meaningful advantage if applying to a low population remote state such as Wyoming, the Dakotas, Kansas, Nebraska, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and other places where no admission boost is needed.
Might generate better responses if certain targeted schools were named (Univ. of Texas, SMU, Rice, Colorado College, Pomona College, Claremont McKenna, Tulane, the Maine LACs, WashU in St. Louis, etc.).
I do not think that there is any geographic diversity boost for a DC area student in the Northeast US or for the elite Chicago schools.
I realize that this post may not be very helpful, but it may help to generate additional responses.
The DC area isn't a plus for ANY elite college, anywhere. Not WashU, not Pomona, Stanford, etc. Wishful thinking. If you're from here and applying ANYWHERE you are considered advantaged.
Not true with respect to URM or to socio-economically diverse applicants from the DC area. May not generate a boost for geographic diversity, but might for other types of diversity.
Duh. But that’s not what we’re talking about.
Actually, it might be as these areas often overlap. So, in your lingo, Un-Duh.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it really a thing that people move to some place they don’t really want to go or have any connection to just so their kid has a better chance at XYZ University? Baffling.
There are insane people out there that think it matters where people go to undergrad.
Psst. It does. Particularly if you’re not from a family that is already successful and wealthy, college can open a million doors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it really a thing that people move to some place they don’t really want to go or have any connection to just so their kid has a better chance at XYZ University? Baffling.
There are insane people out there that think it matters where people go to undergrad.
Psst. It does. Particularly if you’re not from a family that is already successful and wealthy, college can open a million doors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:i suspect that a student from the DC area might get a meaningful advantage if applying to a low population remote state such as Wyoming, the Dakotas, Kansas, Nebraska, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and other places where no admission boost is needed.
Might generate better responses if certain targeted schools were named (Univ. of Texas, SMU, Rice, Colorado College, Pomona College, Claremont McKenna, Tulane, the Maine LACs, WashU in St. Louis, etc.).
I do not think that there is any geographic diversity boost for a DC area student in the Northeast US or for the elite Chicago schools.
I realize that this post may not be very helpful, but it may help to generate additional responses.
The DC area isn't a plus for ANY elite college, anywhere. Not WashU, not Pomona, Stanford, etc. Wishful thinking. If you're from here and applying ANYWHERE you are considered advantaged.
In the case of "geographic diversity", geographic distance is the advantage or disadvantage. Two kids who are otherwise exactly the same in income / scores / gpa / race but one comes from thousands of miles away and the other doesn't. Kid applying to UVA from Palo Alto > identical kid applying from McLean.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it really a thing that people move to some place they don’t really want to go or have any connection to just so their kid has a better chance at XYZ University? Baffling.
There are insane people out there that think it matters where people go to undergrad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:i suspect that a student from the DC area might get a meaningful advantage if applying to a low population remote state such as Wyoming, the Dakotas, Kansas, Nebraska, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and other places where no admission boost is needed.
Might generate better responses if certain targeted schools were named (Univ. of Texas, SMU, Rice, Colorado College, Pomona College, Claremont McKenna, Tulane, the Maine LACs, WashU in St. Louis, etc.).
I do not think that there is any geographic diversity boost for a DC area student in the Northeast US or for the elite Chicago schools.
I realize that this post may not be very helpful, but it may help to generate additional responses.
The DC area isn't a plus for ANY elite college, anywhere. Not WashU, not Pomona, Stanford, etc. Wishful thinking. If you're from here and applying ANYWHERE you are considered advantaged.
Anonymous wrote:Is it really a thing that people move to some place they don’t really want to go or have any connection to just so their kid has a better chance at XYZ University? Baffling.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:i suspect that a student from the DC area might get a meaningful advantage if applying to a low population remote state such as Wyoming, the Dakotas, Kansas, Nebraska, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and other places where no admission boost is needed.
Might generate better responses if certain targeted schools were named (Univ. of Texas, SMU, Rice, Colorado College, Pomona College, Claremont McKenna, Tulane, the Maine LACs, WashU in St. Louis, etc.).
I do not think that there is any geographic diversity boost for a DC area student in the Northeast US or for the elite Chicago schools.
I realize that this post may not be very helpful, but it may help to generate additional responses.
The DC area isn't a plus for ANY elite college, anywhere. Not WashU, not Pomona, Stanford, etc. Wishful thinking. If you're from here and applying ANYWHERE you are considered advantaged.
Not true with respect to URM or to socio-economically diverse applicants from the DC area. May not generate a boost for geographic diversity, but might for other types of diversity.
Duh. But that’s not what we’re talking about.
Anonymous wrote:Every college want inner city and rural kids because majority of the applicants are from suburbs. If you attend DC public schools vs Virginia public schools, colleges will see it as a more interesting and tougher experience.