Anonymous wrote:No one has data because the schools don't want you to know this.
-But talk to any parent of a senior this year or last.
-Talk to a NW DC college admissions counselor.
-Look at the schools' student-run Instagram pages from last year and this year (not prefect but give trends)
Listen, we're not making this up for kicks and thrills or to start drama for fun. Pretty much no one is getting in who isn't a minority or an athlete or a big donor's kid.
OR feel free to keep paying the $55K per year and keep your head in the sand until your kid's senior year and you see this play out with your own kid. That's honestly probably the best approach.
Anonymous wrote:No one has data because the schools don't want you to know this.
-But talk to any parent of a senior this year or last.
-Talk to a NW DC college admissions counselor.
-Look at the schools' student-run Instagram pages from last year and this year (not prefect but give trends)
Listen, we're not making this up for kicks and thrills or to start drama for fun. Pretty much no one is getting in who isn't a minority or an athlete or a big donor's kid.
OR feel free to keep paying the $55K per year and keep your head in the sand until your kid's senior year and you see this play out with your own kid. That's honestly probably the best approach.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A truly impressive student from a DC private can get into an Ivy, full stop.
What do you mean by "truly impressive?"
Top 1-2 in the class with outlying extracurriculars to match? Yes, probably so. But that is 2 kids out of 75 or 125 or 150 that get in on academics/resume alone.
But that leaves a LOT of very smart, well prepared kids who can't.
The thing is---> this is a marked change in the past 3 years.
That is what people are saying.
Anonymous wrote:A truly impressive student from a DC private can get into an Ivy, full stop.
Anonymous wrote:No one has data because the schools don't want you to know this.
-But talk to any parent of a senior this year or last.
-Talk to a NW DC college admissions counselor.
-Look at the schools' student-run Instagram pages from last year and this year (not prefect but give trends)
Listen, we're not making this up for kicks and thrills or to start drama for fun. Pretty much no one is getting in who isn't a minority or an athlete or a big donor's kid.
OR feel free to keep paying the $55K per year and keep your head in the sand until your kid's senior year and you see this play out with your own kid. That's honestly probably the best approach.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, but chances of acceptance are better from a public.
Might as well save your money.
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Not true. At all.
You can say this, but to those of us who follow college acceptances in NWDC it really does seem that ED from public is better than RD from private for an unhooked high stats kid. And for many families the >$200k they save by staying in public is the difference between ED and RD.
Well yes, ED is a significant advantage. But ED vs ED or RD vs RD would be the only way to compare.
The person you replied to is just speaking out of their a**. They only have rumor and anecdata to back up their statement.
Look, I went to a Big3 and my kids are now at Jackson Reed. This is a real trend. The numbers have significantly changed over the past 10 years. Top colleges don't want overly privileged kids (unless they are so privileged that they can help the college lol).
Please provide us data to back up this claim.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, but chances of acceptance are better from a public.
Might as well save your money.
![]()
![]()
Not true. At all.
You can say this, but to those of us who follow college acceptances in NWDC it really does seem that ED from public is better than RD from private for an unhooked high stats kid. And for many families the >$200k they save by staying in public is the difference between ED and RD.
Well yes, ED is a significant advantage. But ED vs ED or RD vs RD would be the only way to compare.
The person you replied to is just speaking out of their a**. They only have rumor and anecdata to back up their statement.
Look, I went to a Big3 and my kids are now at Jackson Reed. This is a real trend. The numbers have significantly changed over the past 10 years. Top colleges don't want overly privileged kids (unless they are so privileged that they can help the college lol).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Private school kids are overrepresented at Ivy League and other top schools, relative to the overall student population.
But sure — keep up the myth.
No one is saying kids from private schools don't get into Ivies. We are talking about UNHOOKED kids at private schools. And in general, private school kids in the DC area seem to be getting into Ivies in vastly lower numbers than they were 5-10 years ago.
Anonymous wrote:Private school kids are overrepresented at Ivy League and other top schools, relative to the overall student population.
But sure — keep up the myth.
Anonymous wrote:NCS had one girl last year who got into an Ivy without being a recruited athlete, URM or legacy (VIP or big donor legacy).
The trend seems to be continuing this year at NCS, GDS, Sidwell through ED at least. No kids admitted ED who are no hooked.
Time will tell if anyone unhooked gets in through regular decision.
The admissions landscape has REALLY, REALLY changed in recent (2 or so) years.
The high schools are trying to keep this under wraps but it is a a huge change.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, but chances of acceptance are better from a public.
Might as well save your money.
![]()
![]()
Not true. At all.
You can say this, but to those of us who follow college acceptances in NWDC it really does seem that ED from public is better than RD from private for an unhooked high stats kid. And for many families the >$200k they save by staying in public is the difference between ED and RD.