Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No more test optional. No more super scoring. Early restricted to one school only.
No, we need to keep test optional. That’s the only positive development of the last few years. It levels the playing field dramatically and that’s a great thing.
Anonymous wrote:No more test optional. No more super scoring. Early restricted to one school only.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our private school limits apps to 12. Was 7 just a few years ago, then 9. Went up to 12 during Covid.
Some parents don't like it, because some parents dont like anything. But my son was talking to a regional AO, wondering if he gets dinged because he can't apply ED for financial reasons, and wondering how can he let schools know he's serious. And the AO said, "your school limits apps so we already know an application from Your High School is a serious application - don't worry"
How are college admissions officers able to track that and remember for every single private high school out there, though?
Anonymous wrote:In a country where we can't limit the number of automatic rifles a person owns, it seems highly unlikely that we're going to impose limits on the number of college applications students can submit.
Anonymous wrote:One idea:
I think we need to place a soft limit on apps. Here's how.
All schools have to be on the common app.
Students can apply to 9 schools free of charge
Pro 1: while not an ED situation, schools know this applicant is serious enough about their school to put it on this pretty tidy list. Safeties go back to being safeties.
Pro 2: Schools may not want to encourage 100k+ apps.. Will start to cost them too much to process. Marketing may become more targeted.
After the 9 school limit, students can apply to additional schools but the common app will have a box that auto-fills how many schools each applicant has applied to. This gets filled in for every applicant applying to more than 9 schools, and says exactly how many apps this kid is applying to this cycle. Would update all schools as you apply (ie so that app you send in in November will have how many apps would apply to then, but that box updates throughout the cycle).
Pro: This gives schools key data that's lacking now. For some kids who clearly need a lot of FA, schools may think this applicant is responsibly chasing merit. Other schools may get used to saying in presentations, "we think 12 schools is reasonable". And "Of course, we take a second look at those applicants who have done their research and have us on their short list". Most schools won't take the kids applying bazooka-style, improves yield.
Also, every app after the 9 is $50 and that goes into a fund for community colleges. I think this could be something like 20-50mm a year min.
Anonymous wrote:Our private school limits apps to 12. Was 7 just a few years ago, then 9. Went up to 12 during Covid.
Some parents don't like it, because some parents dont like anything. But my son was talking to a regional AO, wondering if he gets dinged because he can't apply ED for financial reasons, and wondering how can he let schools know he's serious. And the AO said, "your school limits apps so we already know an application from Your High School is a serious application - don't worry"
Anonymous wrote:Our private school limits apps to 12. Was 7 just a few years ago, then 9. Went up to 12 during Covid.
Some parents don't like it, because some parents dont like anything. But my son was talking to a regional AO, wondering if he gets dinged because he can't apply ED for financial reasons, and wondering how can he let schools know he's serious. And the AO said, "your school limits apps so we already know an application from Your High School is a serious application - don't worry"