Anonymous wrote:Only around 2500 students apply ED to Tufts vs Emory and Washu get 2x that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your child is at Jackson Reed - has a shot as these schools continue to look for diversity of Urban experiences.
Pick one and apply ED.
Not the OP but I have a JR student. Please say more- I have not heard about many kids going to these schools from JR in the past few years (high flyers going to Ivies and flagship state schools like Michigan and UVA)....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your child is at Jackson Reed - has a shot as these schools continue to look for diversity of Urban experiences.
Pick one and apply ED.
Not the OP but I have a JR student. Please say more- I have not heard about many kids going to these schools from JR in the past few years (high flyers going to Ivies and flagship state schools like Michigan and UVA)....
All the more reason to apply to different schools. Every high school is subject to groupthink. And an applicant's primary competition is their fellow classmates. So if all the high flyers are applying to the Ivies, UVA and Michigan then apply to Tufts/WashU/Emory/Notre Dame/Rice/Vanderbilt/CMU/Northwestern. The fewer applicants there are from the applicant's high school, the better the odds. And a DC address for most universities will get more attention than say one from suburban NJ.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your child is at Jackson Reed - has a shot as these schools continue to look for diversity of Urban experiences.
Pick one and apply ED.
Not the OP but I have a JR student. Please say more- I have not heard about many kids going to these schools from JR in the past few years (high flyers going to Ivies and flagship state schools like Michigan and UVA)....
All the more reason to apply to different schools. Every high school is subject to groupthink. And an applicant's primary competition is their fellow classmates. So if all the high flyers are applying to the Ivies, UVA and Michigan then apply to Tufts/WashU/Emory/Notre Dame/Rice/Vanderbilt/CMU/Northwestern. The fewer applicants there are from the applicant's high school, the better the odds. And a DC address for most universities will get more attention than say one from suburban NJ.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your child is at Jackson Reed - has a shot as these schools continue to look for diversity of Urban experiences.
Pick one and apply ED.
Not the OP but I have a JR student. Please say more- I have not heard about many kids going to these schools from JR in the past few years (high flyers going to Ivies and flagship state schools like Michigan and UVA)....
Anonymous wrote:If your child is at Jackson Reed - has a shot as these schools continue to look for diversity of Urban experiences.
Pick one and apply ED.
Anonymous wrote:My kid with almost identical stats incl same Eac profile, except 1550 SAT, got into Tufts ED1 (didn’t apply to Vandy), and planned to ED2 to Emory if they weren’t admitted to Tufts. DC’s admission wasn’t shocking to us but DC was class of 2022 and admissions were all over the place then so DC didn’t want to take admission for granted bc they loved Tufts (they really liked Emory and Wash U, too). Fwiw, at least several other students from their graduation class with similar stats who applied to these schools regular decision were not admitted. Likewise other students with similar stays who applied ED to these 3 were admitted.
Good luck whatever your DC decides to do!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Vandy is the hardest Tufts is the easiest.
Tufts, Emory and Wash U are all literally within a percentage point or so the same for ED1.
Anonymous wrote:Vandy is the hardest Tufts is the easiest.
Anonymous wrote:ED1 Vandy, ED2 Emory. RD the others
Anonymous wrote:ED1 Vandy, ED2 Emory. RD the others