Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How is it any better when you have 50+ kids from some giant Moco public applying to the same Ivy? Genuinely curious.
Good question but I think it's because:
-Colleges will limit the number of kids they take from any one high school. Not a strict quota but they know how small the privates are.
-Privates have many more big donor and VIP legacies. Simple legacy means very little in the DMV--you often need to be a donor/VIP and the privates have a lot of these.
-Privates have a high percentage of sports recruits. They have to staff the same sports teams the publics do on a fraction of the student body. So there are far more athletes per capita.
-Privates also have a much higher URM ratio than most publics. At the top ones it's almost 50-50. These kids are gold for college admissions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How is it any better when you have 50+ kids from some giant Moco public applying to the same Ivy? Genuinely curious.
Good question but I think it's because:
-Colleges will limit the number of kids they take from any one high school. Not a strict quota but they know how small the privates are.
-Privates have many more big donor and VIP legacies. Simple legacy means very little in the DMV--you often need to be a donor/VIP and the privates have a lot of these.
-Privates have a high percentage of sports recruits. They have to staff the same sports teams the publics do on a fraction of the student body. So there are far more athletes per capita.
-Privates also have a much higher URM ratio than most publics. At the top ones it's almost 50-50. These kids are gold for college admissions.
This is a good analysis
It’s really not analysis. It’s a theory this person has created, but there’s no cited data to back it up.
It's a good theoretical analysis
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
-Privates also have a much higher URM ratio than most publics. At the top ones it's almost 50-50. These kids are gold for college admissions.
This is not true.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
-Privates also have a much higher URM ratio than most publics. At the top ones it's almost 50-50. These kids are gold for college admissions.
This is not true.
Anonymous wrote:
-Privates also have a much higher URM ratio than most publics. At the top ones it's almost 50-50. These kids are gold for college admissions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How is it any better when you have 50+ kids from some giant Moco public applying to the same Ivy? Genuinely curious.
Good question but I think it's because:
-Colleges will limit the number of kids they take from any one high school. Not a strict quota but they know how small the privates are.
-Privates have many more big donor and VIP legacies. Simple legacy means very little in the DMV--you often need to be a donor/VIP and the privates have a lot of these.
-Privates have a high percentage of sports recruits. They have to staff the same sports teams the publics do on a fraction of the student body. So there are far more athletes per capita.
-Privates also have a much higher URM ratio than most publics. At the top ones it's almost 50-50. These kids are gold for college admissions.
This is a good analysis
It’s really not analysis. It’s a theory this person has created, but there’s no cited data to back it up.
It's a good theoretical analysis
Anonymous wrote:Normally, kids at top privates were born to privileged parents who can confer legacy status hook + make periodic donations to the university.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How is it any better when you have 50+ kids from some giant Moco public applying to the same Ivy? Genuinely curious.
Good question but I think it's because:
-Colleges will limit the number of kids they take from any one high school. Not a strict quota but they know how small the privates are.
-Privates have many more big donor and VIP legacies. Simple legacy means very little in the DMV--you often need to be a donor/VIP and the privates have a lot of these.
-Privates have a high percentage of sports recruits. They have to staff the same sports teams the publics do on a fraction of the student body. So there are far more athletes per capita.
-Privates also have a much higher URM ratio than most publics. At the top ones it's almost 50-50. These kids are gold for college admissions.
This is a good analysis
It’s really not analysis. It’s a theory this person has created, but there’s no cited data to back it up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How is it any better when you have 50+ kids from some giant Moco public applying to the same Ivy? Genuinely curious.
Good question but I think it's because:
-Colleges will limit the number of kids they take from any one high school. Not a strict quota but they know how small the privates are.
-Privates have many more big donor and VIP legacies. Simple legacy means very little in the DMV--you often need to be a donor/VIP and the privates have a lot of these.
-Privates have a high percentage of sports recruits. They have to staff the same sports teams the publics do on a fraction of the student body. So there are far more athletes per capita.
-Privates also have a much higher URM ratio than most publics. At the top ones it's almost 50-50. These kids are gold for college admissions.
This is a good analysis
Anonymous wrote:Aren’t hooked kids chances somewhat diminished too?