Anonymous wrote:Why are colleges even requiring majors on applications at all? My (tippy top) school did not require a declaration until end of sophomore year. You indicated interest on your application but it was not binding. They wanted everyone to explore majors freshman year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi, is it a popular trend for students who are planning on doing a STEM major (Engineering/CS etc) to apply with a humanities major like English and History and then pivot once admitted? I heard this is quite popular in the private school kids applying to top colleges. How do they manage to 'hide' the evidence in their resumes? Won't AOs be able to see that they are bluffing?
Many top universities have direct admit to CS/Engineering/Business majors. So firstly, you would not be able to switch. 2nd, even at a school without direct admit, your EC/Academics need to support your desired major, and being in the robotics club, coding club, and math club and volunteering to teach ES kids to code does not scream you want to be a History or English lit major.
So yes, AO can easily see they are bluffing if their resume doesn't support it
Isn't UVA business 3rd year (apply second year)??
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It works because there isn't strong competition for the humanities seats, and there is no good way for a college to detect "humanities talent" in a high schooler. It's incredibly easy to fake humanities talent because plagiarism is easy.
It doesn't work because you don't just have to add in the humanities, you'd have to subtract out some of the STEM stuff.
Anonymous wrote:I did this to stand out as an applicant. I had extra curriculars that I could tie to the major I said I wanted to study and got a perfect score on the SAT II (back when that was a thing) for my intended major. Even 20 years ago, you couldn't get into an Ivy as a white kid from the suburbs with straight As who was president of a few clubs. You needed a story. Since I had no idea what I wanted to major in, I just picked the thing that I thought would most help me get in. Since I had the grades and test scores to back it up, I did not see anything wrong with it. Other kids have parents who donate buildings or pay for years of travel sports. I bought a Princeton Review book and spent hours studying for the SAT subject test.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi, is it a popular trend for students who are planning on doing a STEM major (Engineering/CS etc) to apply with a humanities major like English and History and then pivot once admitted? I heard this is quite popular in the private school kids applying to top colleges. How do they manage to 'hide' the evidence in their resumes? Won't AOs be able to see that they are bluffing?
Of course admissions will see you're bluffing. If you spent 4 years coding and doing robotics, admissions is not going to believe you're genuine about being an English or elementary education major.
I actually don't know anyone who has tried this and my kids go to competitive private high schools.
Jeez, my kids’ school doesn’t have robotics and coding. So screw those kids, huh. They can’t build their resumes!
Anonymous wrote:It works because there isn't strong competition for the humanities seats, and there is no good way for a college to detect "humanities talent" in a high schooler. It's incredibly easy to fake humanities talent because plagiarism is easy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi, is it a popular trend for students who are planning on doing a STEM major (Engineering/CS etc) to apply with a humanities major like English and History and then pivot once admitted? I heard this is quite popular in the private school kids applying to top colleges. How do they manage to 'hide' the evidence in their resumes? Won't AOs be able to see that they are bluffing?
Of course admissions will see you're bluffing. If you spent 4 years coding and doing robotics, admissions is not going to believe you're genuine about being an English or elementary education major.
I actually don't know anyone who has tried this and my kids go to competitive private high schools.
Jeez, my kids’ school doesn’t have robotics and coding. So screw those kids, huh. They can’t build their resumes!
Lots of online coding classes for kids if they are interested. Robotics might be tougher - but look around - maybe a local University or summer camp.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi, is it a popular trend for students who are planning on doing a STEM major (Engineering/CS etc) to apply with a humanities major like English and History and then pivot once admitted? I heard this is quite popular in the private school kids applying to top colleges. How do they manage to 'hide' the evidence in their resumes? Won't AOs be able to see that they are bluffing?
Many top universities have direct admit to CS/Engineering/Business majors. So firstly, you would not be able to switch. 2nd, even at a school without direct admit, your EC/Academics need to support your desired major, and being in the robotics club, coding club, and math club and volunteering to teach ES kids to code does not scream you want to be a History or English lit major.
So yes, AO can easily see they are bluffing if their resume doesn't support it
Anonymous wrote:I did this to stand out as an applicant. I had extra curriculars that I could tie to the major I said I wanted to study and got a perfect score on the SAT II (back when that was a thing) for my intended major. Even 20 years ago, you couldn't get into an Ivy as a white kid from the suburbs with straight As who was president of a few clubs. You needed a story. Since I had no idea what I wanted to major in, I just picked the thing that I thought would most help me get in. Since I had the grades and test scores to back it up, I did not see anything wrong with it. Other kids have parents who donate buildings or pay for years of travel sports. I bought a Princeton Review book and spent hours studying for the SAT subject test.
Anonymous wrote:Hi, is it a popular trend for students who are planning on doing a STEM major (Engineering/CS etc) to apply with a humanities major like English and History and then pivot once admitted? I heard this is quite popular in the private school kids applying to top colleges. How do they manage to 'hide' the evidence in their resumes? Won't AOs be able to see that they are bluffing?