Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This whole racket is hilarious. My son is a straight A student and will probably graduate with at least 10APs and had already scored 5s on the 2 he took sophomore year. Scored a 1480 on his PSATs.
He had no time to award collect. He plays a varsity sport and when not in season he has to work. So not only does he keep up perfect grades, he plays a varsity sport and works 20-40hrs a week. What a friggin joke! Yea this might hurt my son in the admissions process , but I can guarantee you he will be a high achiever in life with his real world work ethic.
I guess his essays will be “sorry, don’t have time to grade grub and grub for Bs awards because I’ve been busy working like a boss”
Working is so much better than awards these day with the equity push. Don't worry about it.
+1 And multiple kids on this thread alone have none. That’s normal. That said, it takes a couple quick emails and about 10 minutes on your phone to fill out the NHS application. You could do it on the toilet. No one is too busy for that.
Re: NHS. Depends on the school. My DD had to write multiple short essays. Once in, has to do 16 service learning hours per semester - and many easy volunteer hours don’t count. (Also, meetings are mandatory). Some kids don’t join because they don’t have time for it.
My kid was invited to join NHS but didn't do it.
Wasn't feeling doing the required service hours, especially after having a heavy academic load + paid employment.
Anonymous wrote:This whole racket is hilarious. My son is a straight A student and will probably graduate with at least 10APs and had already scored 5s on the 2 he took sophomore year. Scored a 1480 on his PSATs.
He had no time to award collect. He plays a varsity sport and when not in season he has to work. So not only does he keep up perfect grades, he plays a varsity sport and works 20-40hrs a week. What a friggin joke! Yea this might hurt my son in the admissions process , but I can guarantee you he will be a high achiever in life with his real world work ethic.
I guess his essays will be “sorry, don’t have time to grade grub and grub for Bs awards because I’ve been busy working like a boss”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This whole racket is hilarious. My son is a straight A student and will probably graduate with at least 10APs and had already scored 5s on the 2 he took sophomore year. Scored a 1480 on his PSATs.
He had no time to award collect. He plays a varsity sport and when not in season he has to work. So not only does he keep up perfect grades, he plays a varsity sport and works 20-40hrs a week. What a friggin joke! Yea this might hurt my son in the admissions process , but I can guarantee you he will be a high achiever in life with his real world work ethic.
I guess his essays will be “sorry, don’t have time to grade grub and grub for Bs awards because I’ve been busy working like a boss”
Working is so much better than awards these day with the equity push. Don't worry about it.
+1 And multiple kids on this thread alone have none. That’s normal. That said, it takes a couple quick emails and about 10 minutes on your phone to fill out the NHS application. You could do it on the toilet. No one is too busy for that.
Re: NHS. Depends on the school. My DD had to write multiple short essays. Once in, has to do 16 service learning hours per semester - and many easy volunteer hours don’t count. (Also, meetings are mandatory). Some kids don’t join because they don’t have time for it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This whole racket is hilarious. My son is a straight A student and will probably graduate with at least 10APs and had already scored 5s on the 2 he took sophomore year. Scored a 1480 on his PSATs.
He had no time to award collect. He plays a varsity sport and when not in season he has to work. So not only does he keep up perfect grades, he plays a varsity sport and works 20-40hrs a week. What a friggin joke! Yea this might hurt my son in the admissions process , but I can guarantee you he will be a high achiever in life with his real world work ethic.
I guess his essays will be “sorry, don’t have time to grade grub and grub for Bs awards because I’ve been busy working like a boss”
Working is so much better than awards these day with the equity push. Don't worry about it.
+1 And multiple kids on this thread alone have none. That’s normal. That said, it takes a couple quick emails and about 10 minutes on your phone to fill out the NHS application. You could do it on the toilet. No one is too busy for that.
Re: NHS. Depends on the school. My DD had to write multiple short essays. Once in, has to do 16 service learning hours per semester - and many easy volunteer hours don’t count. (Also, meetings are mandatory). Some kids don’t join because they don’t have time for it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This whole racket is hilarious. My son is a straight A student and will probably graduate with at least 10APs and had already scored 5s on the 2 he took sophomore year. Scored a 1480 on his PSATs.
He had no time to award collect. He plays a varsity sport and when not in season he has to work. So not only does he keep up perfect grades, he plays a varsity sport and works 20-40hrs a week. What a friggin joke! Yea this might hurt my son in the admissions process , but I can guarantee you he will be a high achiever in life with his real world work ethic.
I guess his essays will be “sorry, don’t have time to grade grub and grub for Bs awards because I’ve been busy working like a boss”
Working is so much better than awards these day with the equity push. Don't worry about it.
+1 And multiple kids on this thread alone have none. That’s normal. That said, it takes a couple quick emails and about 10 minutes on your phone to fill out the NHS application. You could do it on the toilet. No one is too busy for that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This whole racket is hilarious. My son is a straight A student and will probably graduate with at least 10APs and had already scored 5s on the 2 he took sophomore year. Scored a 1480 on his PSATs.
He had no time to award collect. He plays a varsity sport and when not in season he has to work. So not only does he keep up perfect grades, he plays a varsity sport and works 20-40hrs a week. What a friggin joke! Yea this might hurt my son in the admissions process , but I can guarantee you he will be a high achiever in life with his real world work ethic.
I guess his essays will be “sorry, don’t have time to grade grub and grub for Bs awards because I’ve been busy working like a boss”
Working is so much better than awards these day with the equity push. Don't worry about it.
Anonymous wrote:This whole racket is hilarious. My son is a straight A student and will probably graduate with at least 10APs and had already scored 5s on the 2 he took sophomore year. Scored a 1480 on his PSATs.
He had no time to award collect. He plays a varsity sport and when not in season he has to work. So not only does he keep up perfect grades, he plays a varsity sport and works 20-40hrs a week. What a friggin joke! Yea this might hurt my son in the admissions process , but I can guarantee you he will be a high achiever in life with his real world work ethic.
I guess his essays will be “sorry, don’t have time to grade grub and grub for Bs awards because I’ve been busy working like a boss”
Anonymous wrote:I had, no joke, 5 national / international awards. Then like 10-15 other regional awards. I went to MIT, though, so depends on the school.