Anonymous wrote:lol. Schools now routinely get 100k applicants and the first read is by an alum who gets minimum wage. Admissions personnel may never even see your application. But my neighbor who went to William and Mary and has been a SAHM for twenty years and gets minimum wage is out there researching which youth orchestras in Ohio are scams. Dream on!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can colleges tell if you actually worked hard throughout high school?? For example, if you get good grades but go to a really easy school? Or if you win a bunch of phony violin competitions or whatever? Just curious…
No, they can't. As long as you do not make up stuff that is extremely well known. If you make up stuff that is not googlable then you are fine. You can lie in your essays, get your essays written by someone else, make up your non-academic accomplishments etc.
The only thing that you should not lie about is your GPA, courses you take, SAT scores etc. because these get verified by the school or college board.
Now, let's talk about phony violin competitions. You will basically need to hold a "phony violin completion". Have a bunch of your non-violin playing friends participate in a completion you create, participate in it, create a website and YouTube videos about the completion, win the competition and then write about it. You can certainly do that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do they actually care? Perhaps all they want is your money?
Top colleges care.
Anonymous wrote:Can colleges tell if you actually worked hard throughout high school?? For example, if you get good grades but go to a really easy school? Or if you win a bunch of phony violin competitions or whatever? Just curious…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At the very least, I would guess they could Google the name of any major award or competition someone claims to have won if they’ve never heard of it.
You think they have time for that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At the very least, I would guess they could Google the name of any major award or competition someone claims to have won if they’ve never heard of it.
You think they have time for that?
Anonymous wrote:Letters of recommendation can be very revealing.
Anonymous wrote:At the very least, I would guess they could Google the name of any major award or competition someone claims to have won if they’ve never heard of it.