Anonymous wrote:You’re asking for (almost) irrelevant information. HYPSM look wayyy beyond GPA and SAT scores. You have no clue.
Anonymous wrote:Non-DMV HS
H: Valedictorian with a 1550+ SAT (not sure of the exact score but it was 1550-1590). Was student council president and head of a funded club giving grants to non-profits. Also a team captain but was not a college-level athlete.
Y: Salutatorian with a 33 ACT. Worked a significant amount of time for a small family business and was still on student council and the leader of the entrepreneurship and business-related clubs. Another team captain who was not a college-level athlete. Not first-gen but a compelling backstory and a strong writer.
Following year:
P: Salutatorian with a 35 ACT (was an indirect legacy with a grandparent). Was involved in leadership for robotics and backstage theater, both of which were large passions over the entire HS career. That valedictorian went to Swarthmore.
Anonymous wrote:Two kids
SAT 1560; >4.0 GPA
SAT 1580 NMSF; >4.0 GPA
no hooks, not URM, not a donor
People ask where our kids go to school and I almost hesitate because it sounds a little ridiculous. But they don't stop asking if I try to be vague. But we are proud and happy for them
Anonymous wrote:Related, if you've won the lottery recently, what numbers did you pick?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Only people we know without a hook who got into HYPS were a valedictorian, a salutatorian with research experience, a young woman with amazing music accomplishments (got into Columbia-Juilliard too) in the top 5%, and a top mathematician (nationally recognized) in the top 5%. MIT accepts 1-2 students a year and they’re always unhooked, but geniuses similar to the fourth example.
Top 5% of what? Certainly not if all high school graduates.