Anonymous wrote:Is Philly that bad?Anonymous wrote:Duke. Way better location plus the food is awesome.
Anonymous wrote:Is Philly that bad?Anonymous wrote:Duke. Way better location plus the food is awesome.
Is Philly that bad?Anonymous wrote:Duke. Way better location plus the food is awesome.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Doesn’t she have favorite neuroscience labs or researchers at one of the institutions? I would have thought she would have reached out to 3 or 4 labs any each school already to discuss her interests and see which university is a better fit.
Troll
Not PP, but my dad is a professor at one of these schools, and I can confirm that he gets students contacting him like this all the time.
Let me tell you why this is stupid. (edits)
3) contacting professors about working with them or with specific questions at colleges that are extremely difficult admits is so presumptuous from a high school student it is laughable for most kids
And yet my kid - all on his own - contacted a professor at a top LAC after he read something the professor wrote, and not only did that lead to a summer research position and publication, it was paid. Prof also wrote him a rec (he attended elsewhere) and they still communicate. Many professors are amazing people who love to inspire motivated kids, and this was one of them.
So yes, it happens to some kids. It does not happen for any of the ones that don't try.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Doesn’t she have favorite neuroscience labs or researchers at one of the institutions? I would have thought she would have reached out to 3 or 4 labs any each school already to discuss her interests and see which university is a better fit.
Troll
Not PP, but my dad is a professor at one of these schools, and I can confirm that he gets students contacting him like this all the time.
Let me tell you why this is stupid. (edits)
3) contacting professors about working with them or with specific questions at colleges that are extremely difficult admits is so presumptuous from a high school student it is laughable for most kids
And yet my kid - all on his own - contacted a professor at a top LAC after he read something the professor wrote, and not only did that lead to a summer research position and publication, it was paid. Prof also wrote him a rec (he attended elsewhere) and they still communicate. Many professors are amazing people who love to inspire motivated kids, and this was one of them.
So yes, it happens to some kids. It does not happen for any of the ones that don't try.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Doesn’t she have favorite neuroscience labs or researchers at one of the institutions? I would have thought she would have reached out to 3 or 4 labs any each school already to discuss her interests and see which university is a better fit.
Troll
Not PP, but my dad is a professor at one of these schools, and I can confirm that he gets students contacting him like this all the time.
Let me tell you why this is stupid. (edits)
3) contacting professors about working with them or with specific questions at colleges that are extremely difficult admits is so presumptuous from a high school student it is laughable for most kids
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Doesn’t she have favorite neuroscience labs or researchers at one of the institutions? I would have thought she would have reached out to 3 or 4 labs any each school already to discuss her interests and see which university is a better fit.
Troll
Not PP, but my dad is a professor at one of these schools, and I can confirm that he gets students contacting him like this all the time.
Let me tell you why this is stupid.
1) high school kids have not had an opportunity to study neuroscience to any reasonable level
2) just because a student is interested in neuroscience doesn’t mean they have an interest in research
3) contacting professors about working with them or with specific questions at colleges that are extremely difficult admits is so presumptuous from a high school student it is laughable for most kids
4) few high school kids understand academics or academic research enough unless they already have family or contacts in academics making this peak absurdity
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP you cannot go wrong with either of these fabulous schools. As you know, it is very likely that neither one will be an admit. I'd go for the one that's more likely an admit. Which is probably Penn.
Since when is an Ivy school a “more likely admit?”
Anonymous wrote:OP you cannot go wrong with either of these fabulous schools. As you know, it is very likely that neither one will be an admit. I'd go for the one that's more likely an admit. Which is probably Penn.