Anonymous wrote:The question was about elite schools. In what world are Pitt, W&M, Clemson, Northeastern, Wake Forest, and Oberlin "elite"?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The question was about elite schools. In what world are Pitt, W&M, Clemson, Northeastern, Wake Forest, and Oberlin "elite"?
Amherst, Williams, and I believe Swarthmore have no additional essays, if any of those fit your definition of elite.
Williams does have a 300-word question about interacting with different types of people. It also allows students to submit a graded paper.
The Williams one must be new this year then. Too bad, because I thought it and Amherst’s no extra essays, no interviews take on things was equity-based — and now there is another essay to curate and game, ironically with an equity-diversity topic
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Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The question was about elite schools. In what world are Pitt, W&M, Clemson, Northeastern, Wake Forest, and Oberlin "elite"?
Amherst, Williams, and I believe Swarthmore have no additional essays, if any of those fit your definition of elite.
Williams does have a 300-word question about interacting with different types of people. It also allows students to submit a graded paper.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The question was about elite schools. In what world are Pitt, W&M, Clemson, Northeastern, Wake Forest, and Oberlin "elite"?
Amherst, Williams, and I believe Swarthmore have no additional essays, if any of those fit your definition of elite.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The question was about elite schools. In what world are Pitt, W&M, Clemson, Northeastern, Wake Forest, and Oberlin "elite"?
Amherst, Williams, and I believe Swarthmore have no additional essays, if any of those fit your definition of elite.
Anonymous wrote:The question was about elite schools. In what world are Pitt, W&M, Clemson, Northeastern, Wake Forest, and Oberlin "elite"?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In all honesty, if your kid isn’t willing to write a 250-500 word supplemental essay, they are going to hate any elite or private university. My kids are both at small top 20s and have written their asses off. My freshman has already written four 5-7 page papers for two of her classes, and several smaller writing assignments. Her other two classes are comp sci and calculus, so luckily no paper writing in those. My senior has written papers for most of her classes as an Econ major outside of math and programming classes, and will spend her last semester writing a thesis.
Large public universities with large lecture classes rarely require writing unless the student is in a writing based major. The professors just can’t read and grade hundreds of papers. Large universities love multiple choice scantron tests.
Writing based majors are usually less valueable and close to useless sometimes.
I majored in English and make $1 million plus a year. Not sure how you think my major was close to useless.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In all honesty, if your kid isn’t willing to write a 250-500 word supplemental essay, they are going to hate any elite or private university. My kids are both at small top 20s and have written their asses off. My freshman has already written four 5-7 page papers for two of her classes, and several smaller writing assignments. Her other two classes are comp sci and calculus, so luckily no paper writing in those. My senior has written papers for most of her classes as an Econ major outside of math and programming classes, and will spend her last semester writing a thesis.
Large public universities with large lecture classes rarely require writing unless the student is in a writing based major. The professors just can’t read and grade hundreds of papers. Large universities love multiple choice scantron tests.
Writing based majors are usually less valueable and close to useless sometimes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In all honesty, if your kid isn’t willing to write a 250-500 word supplemental essay, they are going to hate any elite or private university. My kids are both at small top 20s and have written their asses off. My freshman has already written four 5-7 page papers for two of her classes, and several smaller writing assignments. Her other two classes are comp sci and calculus, so luckily no paper writing in those. My senior has written papers for most of her classes as an Econ major outside of math and programming classes, and will spend her last semester writing a thesis.
Large public universities with large lecture classes rarely require writing unless the student is in a writing based major. The professors just can’t read and grade hundreds of papers. Large universities love multiple choice scantron tests.
Writing based majors are usually less valueable and close to useless sometimes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In all honesty, if your kid isn’t willing to write a 250-500 word supplemental essay, they are going to hate any elite or private university. My kids are both at small top 20s and have written their asses off. My freshman has already written four 5-7 page papers for two of her classes, and several smaller writing assignments. Her other two classes are comp sci and calculus, so luckily no paper writing in those. My senior has written papers for most of her classes as an Econ major outside of math and programming classes, and will spend her last semester writing a thesis.
Large public universities with large lecture classes rarely require writing unless the student is in a writing based major. The professors just can’t read and grade hundreds of papers. Large universities love multiple choice scantron tests.
Writing based majors are usually less valueable and close to useless sometimes.
Anonymous wrote:In all honesty, if your kid isn’t willing to write a 250-500 word supplemental essay, they are going to hate any elite or private university. My kids are both at small top 20s and have written their asses off. My freshman has already written four 5-7 page papers for two of her classes, and several smaller writing assignments. Her other two classes are comp sci and calculus, so luckily no paper writing in those. My senior has written papers for most of her classes as an Econ major outside of math and programming classes, and will spend her last semester writing a thesis.
Large public universities with large lecture classes rarely require writing unless the student is in a writing based major. The professors just can’t read and grade hundreds of papers. Large universities love multiple choice scantron tests.