Anonymous wrote:To do some guesstimate math:
Trinity in their 23-24 annual report states that they had 611 applicants for K and made 70 offers to get to 63 accepted kids.
......
Compare this to Trinity which is ~6%.
Anonymous wrote:I would consider expanding your search beyond that one school. We were/are in a similar position and were admitted to a school we're very excited about, with no consultants, connections, etc. If you're down to earth and excited about a good education for your child, and the school being the right fit, that should ideally come across.
Anonymous wrote:I would consider expanding your search beyond that one school. We were/are in a similar position and were admitted to a school we're very excited about, with no consultants, connections, etc. If you're down to earth and excited about a good education for your child, and the school being the right fit, that should ideally come across.
Anonymous wrote:To do some guesstimate math:
Trinity in their 23-24 annual report states that they had 611 applicants for K and made 70 offers to get to 63 accepted kids.
For Collegiate:
Let's cut that down by more than half - to say, 250 (assume location + single sex results in some parents selecting out).
Assume 50% of the 55 slots they have are taken up by sibling + legacy (very rough number based on what I hear across multiple independent schools).
That leaves 28 slots to fill using ~31 offers for 223 unconnected applicants which means it's roughly an 14% baseline chance of acceptance.
Compare this to Trinity which is ~6%.