Anonymous wrote:Unless your kid’s transcript and resume indicate a strong interest (I.e. entire high school career) in the humanities, this will not work. Colleges well aware of this trick.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless your kid’s transcript and resume indicate a strong interest (I.e. entire high school career) in the humanities, this will not work. Colleges well aware of this trick.
How would it not reflect this? Everyone has to take 4 years of all the cores and there isn't a lot of room for electives.
My Senior has 4 humanities/English/history courses this year and he took a few college course credits in the subject (due to a very intense interest).
He had an AP history every year. Both AP English-lang, lit., etc. They have 7 courses each semester so there was a lot of room for electives in art and niche government courses, etc.
So it will depend what is offered at your school.
That sounds normal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless your kid’s transcript and resume indicate a strong interest (I.e. entire high school career) in the humanities, this will not work. Colleges well aware of this trick.
How would it not reflect this? Everyone has to take 4 years of all the cores and there isn't a lot of room for electives.
My Senior has 4 humanities/English/history courses this year and he took a few college course credits in the subject (due to a very intense interest).
He had an AP history every year. Both AP English-lang, lit., etc. They have 7 courses each semester so there was a lot of room for electives in art and niche government courses, etc.
So it will depend what is offered at your school.
Anonymous wrote:Which selective schools offer an advantage to male applicants who are interested in the humanities or liberal arts?
So far, I’ve seen:
Yale
Brown
Emory
Tulane
Pomona
Swarthmore
Vanderbilt?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless your kid’s transcript and resume indicate a strong interest (I.e. entire high school career) in the humanities, this will not work. Colleges well aware of this trick.
How would it not reflect this? Everyone has to take 4 years of all the cores and there isn't a lot of room for electives.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless your kid’s transcript and resume indicate a strong interest (I.e. entire high school career) in the humanities, this will not work. Colleges well aware of this trick.
How would it not reflect this? Everyone has to take 4 years of all the cores and there isn't a lot of room for electives.
Anonymous wrote:Unless your kid’s transcript and resume indicate a strong interest (I.e. entire high school career) in the humanities, this will not work. Colleges well aware of this trick.
Anonymous wrote:The essays also look phony without a clear passion behind “intended major”. And a case isn’t built.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's not an advantage if your son hasn't taken the majority of his electives and AP courses in humanities. If your kid's courses in high school and activities are very stem-oriented, they know what you are doing and it doesn't sit well with AOs.
If a kid has 5 different AP histories, both AP English, etc., there is a clear desire shown. My son has very comparative govt, comparative politics, every ap history--Euro, Push, Art, etc.
It's just like STEM majors--if you are seriously lacking in math/science APs as main electives, you aren't going to fare well. And the Ivies and top 20s want to see a 36 in Verbal and Reading on ACT and equivalent perfect on SAT, especially Yale.
Little tip from AOs that have seen every game in the book. It doesn't look sincere. Back in the day, the trick was everyone applied to the Nursing School at UVA to get in. They stopped allowing that- can't transfer.
Not to mention then they aren’t going to be adequately prepared for engineering/cs/physics/math, etc- without all those highest level STEM electives once they get in.
Anonymous wrote:It's not an advantage if your son hasn't taken the majority of his electives and AP courses in humanities. If your kid's courses in high school and activities are very stem-oriented, they know what you are doing and it doesn't sit well with AOs.
If a kid has 5 different AP histories, both AP English, etc., there is a clear desire shown. My son has very comparative govt, comparative politics, every ap history--Euro, Push, Art, etc.
It's just like STEM majors--if you are seriously lacking in math/science APs as main electives, you aren't going to fare well. And the Ivies and top 20s want to see a 36 in Verbal and Reading on ACT and equivalent perfect on SAT, especially Yale.
Little tip from AOs that have seen every game in the book. It doesn't look sincere. Back in the day, the trick was everyone applied to the Nursing School at UVA to get in. They stopped allowing that- can't transfer.