Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What 16/17yo has been interested "for years" in literary criticism?
It's called "enjoying reading." Some teens aren't terminally online.
An enjoyment of reading does not equal interest in lit crit. Not even close.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What 16/17yo has been interested "for years" in literary criticism?
It's called "enjoying reading." Some teens aren't terminally online.
Anonymous wrote:What 16/17yo has been interested "for years" in literary criticism?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC has been interested in going to Duke for years now, primarily due to their literature department. I don't know much about the subject but DC tells me that they are known for having an excellent literary criticism and theory program, and I can see that it is ranked #1 in us news and world report for this. College counselor thinks DC should apply early to Duke and should emphasize the talent in this area. So here's my question: do universities like Duke give a boost for someone with interest/talent in the university's strong area, or is it really the other way around. For example, Yale gives a boost in admissions to people with an interest in engineering, because that is an area of weakness for them. They wouldn't give a boost to someone with a talent in history. Any thoughts?
Does your student have the grades and courseload to be competitive for Duke? The rest is irrelevant if they are not well within the ballpark based on the basics.
Everyone who has Duke as their number 1 should ED, as long as it is a reasonable reach and not a complete waste of ED.
Anonymous wrote:I think it's a plus.
The STEM kids are having a hard time standing out from the crowd.
Anonymous wrote:DC has been interested in going to Duke for years now, primarily due to their literature department. I don't know much about the subject but DC tells me that they are known for having an excellent literary criticism and theory program, and I can see that it is ranked #1 in us news and world report for this. College counselor thinks DC should apply early to Duke and should emphasize the talent in this area. So here's my question: do universities like Duke give a boost for someone with interest/talent in the university's strong area, or is it really the other way around. For example, Yale gives a boost in admissions to people with an interest in engineering, because that is an area of weakness for them. They wouldn't give a boost to someone with a talent in history. Any thoughts?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Academics always love to hear that a young student is willing to pay lots of money to keep their unprofitable scholarship humming along.
Sure, it might be a hook given that he's a male interested in the humanities.
There are plenty of males interested in humanities applying to top schools - it's not a hook. This describes one of our kids.
But this very specific deep dive could help given Duke's connection. Especially if the applicant has won awards from places the department would recognize as being special.
Anonymous wrote:What 16/17yo has been interested "for years" in literary criticism?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC has been interested in going to Duke for years now, primarily due to their literature department. I don't know much about the subject but DC tells me that they are known for having an excellent literary criticism and theory program, and I can see that it is ranked #1 in us news and world report for this. College counselor thinks DC should apply early to Duke and should emphasize the talent in this area. So here's my question: do universities like Duke give a boost for someone with interest/talent in the university's strong area, or is it really the other way around. For example, Yale gives a boost in admissions to people with an interest in engineering, because that is an area of weakness for them. They wouldn't give a boost to someone with a talent in history. Any thoughts?
They have only 25 English majors; 7 master’s degrees; and 15 doctoral degrees. They need even more undergrads and they have huge grad school dept. resources; it’s a plus.
On another level, demonstrated interest in anything that is not computer science, engineering, biological sciences, or econ is a plus.
Anonymous wrote:I think it's a plus.
The STEM kids are having a hard time standing out from the crowd.
Anonymous wrote:What 16/17yo has been interested "for years" in literary criticism?
Anonymous wrote:Academics always love to hear that a young student is willing to pay lots of money to keep their unprofitable scholarship humming along.
Sure, it might be a hook given that he's a male interested in the humanities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think if it shows intellectual curiosity it’s good but an undergrad is unlikely to take that much literary theory. He might take one course in it as an English major.
So I wouldn’t overplay it either. Does he really understand what it is? Can he convey his interest authentically?
Thanks for the excellent advice. It's not a subject that I understand at all (I'm a biotech person) but from what others tell me, he seems to have a surprisingly good understanding. Or at the very least, he seems to win a lot of awards/prizes for various essays he submits to contests. He wrote one on a piece of pop culture that a faculty member at our local state university really liked.