Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many years ago, an applicant who was denied admission to his first choice school (Yale University), pitched a tent outside of the admissions office demanding that he be admitted. Garnered student support & national publicity & he was admitted to Yale.
I heard of a janitor at MIT that solved highly complex math problems that none of the students could solve. Believe he was admitted directly into their graduate program.
The key concept that's missing here is customized essays. All other things being equal, admissions officers have a harder time refusing someone who can express enthusiasm with particular courses/professors, or something specific about that college. It's cheaper than a visit and a lot more powerful. Also, keep in mind that the Common App allows this: since you click submit for each college separately, you can tweak your personal statement each time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many years ago, an applicant who was denied admission to his first choice school (Yale University), pitched a tent outside of the admissions office demanding that he be admitted. Garnered student support & national publicity & he was admitted to Yale.
I heard of a janitor at MIT that solved highly complex math problems that none of the students could solve. Believe he was admitted directly into their graduate program.
Interesting. Please tell us more.
You are not serious...are you?
These kinds of things happen all the time. I also know a homeless man that was pulled off the streets by one of the top Philadelphia trading firms and ended up becoming one of their star employees. He made a fortune in commodities trading...specifically, frozen orange juice contracts (and pork bellies to some extent).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many years ago, an applicant who was denied admission to his first choice school (Yale University), pitched a tent outside of the admissions office demanding that he be admitted. Garnered student support & national publicity & he was admitted to Yale.
I heard of a janitor at MIT that solved highly complex math problems that none of the students could solve. Believe he was admitted directly into their graduate program.
Interesting. Please tell us more.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many years ago, an applicant who was denied admission to his first choice school (Yale University), pitched a tent outside of the admissions office demanding that he be admitted. Garnered student support & national publicity & he was admitted to Yale.
I heard of a janitor at MIT that solved highly complex math problems that none of the students could solve. Believe he was admitted directly into their graduate program.
Interesting. Please tell us more.
Anonymous wrote:My nephew started Googling colleges with rolling admissions and applying to 5 or 6 of those. He ended up getting accepted at all of them and picked the University of Iowa. He attended for 1 year and transferred to VA Tech.
He had excellent stats but according to his guidance counselor, he was just as above average as everyone else applying in his "bracket" and too above average for the safety schools to take him seriously.
His experience made me terrified for my own DS's process. We made sure to select a wide variety of schools just in case. We also did in-person visits/tours to the safety schools he really liked so it showed real interest on DS part. I'm not sure if that helped or not, but he got in at all his safety schools.
Anonymous wrote:My nephew started Googling colleges with rolling admissions and applying to 5 or 6 of those. He ended up getting accepted at all of them and picked the University of Iowa. He attended for 1 year and transferred to VA Tech.
He had excellent stats but according to his guidance counselor, he was just as above average as everyone else applying in his "bracket" and too above average for the safety schools to take him seriously.
His experience made me terrified for my own DS's process. We made sure to select a wide variety of schools just in case. We also did in-person visits/tours to the safety schools he really liked so it showed real interest on DS part. I'm not sure if that helped or not, but he got in at all his safety schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many years ago, an applicant who was denied admission to his first choice school (Yale University), pitched a tent outside of the admissions office demanding that he be admitted. Garnered student support & national publicity & he was admitted to Yale.
I heard of a janitor at MIT that solved highly complex math problems that none of the students could solve. Believe he was admitted directly into their graduate program.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many years ago, an applicant who was denied admission to his first choice school (Yale University), pitched a tent outside of the admissions office demanding that he be admitted. Garnered student support & national publicity & he was admitted to Yale.
How many years ago? 70? 80? This is urban legend. Please correct me with a link to the source.
https://nypost.com/2016/02/07/former-yale-admissions-officer-reveals-secrets-of-who-gets-in/
FYI, that was a ridiculously easy Google search.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many years ago, an applicant who was denied admission to his first choice school (Yale University), pitched a tent outside of the admissions office demanding that he be admitted. Garnered student support & national publicity & he was admitted to Yale.
I heard of a janitor at MIT that solved highly complex math problems that none of the students could solve. Believe he was admitted directly into their graduate program.