Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Haverford is unrealistic with that stats. But Bryn Mawr may be a good fit though still a reach for many. It’s right across the street from Haverford so essentially it’s a same college considering they are both small. Bryn Mawr students also get to take classes at Haverford. I believe you may take as many classes from Haverford but I might be wrong.
Please note that these schools reside 1.6 miles from each other.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Haverford is unrealistic with that stats. But Bryn Mawr may be a good fit though still a reach for many. It’s right across the street from Haverford so essentially it’s a same college considering they are both small. Bryn Mawr students also get to take classes at Haverford. I believe you may take as many classes from Haverford but I might be wrong.
Please note that these schools reside 1.6 miles from each other.
Anonymous wrote:Haverford is unrealistic with that stats. But Bryn Mawr may be a good fit though still a reach for many. It’s right across the street from Haverford so essentially it’s a same college considering they are both small. Bryn Mawr students also get to take classes at Haverford. I believe you may take as many classes from Haverford but I might be wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your kid’s transcript is not very strong relative to their high school, a 1500 wasn’t going to get them into Swarthmore anyway. But a 3.85 UW and 1440ish SAT should find plenty of landing spots in the 26-50 range. The snobbery on the board generally produces a lot of dismissive talk about schools in this range but there are many really great options.
OP here - I agree with this, and I think my DD will be fine! There are many great schools in that band, and I trust she'll get into one and be happy there. It just struck me as ironic that, for us, test optional is actually magnifying the importance of test scores and limiting where she applies. I don't want to get into the minutiae of my kid's stats - she has some factors in her favor that compensate for a lowish GPA, IMO - but this is not specifically about her and her chances. It's also not just about Swarthmore-level colleges. Haverford, ranked 24, has a 1490 25th percentile, 1520 median for 2024 (with 26 percent submitting SAT, 13 percent ACT). Prior to test optional, as best I can determine, their 25th percentile was 1320, average 1420. That's a huge difference! (And I get there's been some inflation in scores, but I wonder if that's partly because students are taking the test more and more often to improve their scores.)
Anonymous wrote:To the prior poster’s point, I think you are thinking about this incorrectly, or not viewing the score in the proper context. Where does the 3.85 UW fall relative to the HS class? Did DD take advantage of available APs, IB, or honors courses? The level of rigor and how the student performs relative to what the HS offers is generally a much more important factor than an SAT score for the SLACs. You don’t have to take my word for it, just look at section C of the CDSs. Similarly for the SAT score, where does it fall relative to high performing peers at the HS. For the top 20ish SLACs a good score that sort of falls below the peer group aspiring to selective schools will only hurt your candidacy no matter where it falls within the colleges middle 50. Farther down the selectivity ladder, things might be a little more forgiving. If you are likely full pay, that’s another thumb on the scale. It’s not really an impact on your kid at all. If your kid’s transcript is not very strong relative to their high school, a 1500 wasn’t going to get them into Swarthmore anyway. But a 3.85 UW and 1440ish SAT should find plenty of landing spots in the 26-50 range. The snobbery on the board generally produces a lot of dismissive talk about schools in this range but there are many really great options.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your kid’s transcript is not very strong relative to their high school, a 1500 wasn’t going to get them into Swarthmore anyway. But a 3.85 UW and 1440ish SAT should find plenty of landing spots in the 26-50 range. The snobbery on the board generally produces a lot of dismissive talk about schools in this range but there are many really great options.
OP here - I agree with this, and I think my DD will be fine! There are many great schools in that band, and I trust she'll get into one and be happy there. It just struck me as ironic that, for us, test optional is actually magnifying the importance of test scores and limiting where she applies. I don't want to get into the minutiae of my kid's stats - she has some factors in her favor that compensate for a lowish GPA, IMO - but this is not specifically about her and her chances. It's also not just about Swarthmore-level colleges. Haverford, ranked 24, has a 1490 25th percentile, 1520 median for 2024 (with 26 percent submitting SAT, 13 percent ACT). Prior to test optional, as best I can determine, their 25th percentile was 1320, average 1420. That's a huge difference! (And I get there's been some inflation in scores, but I wonder if that's partly because students are taking the test more and more often to improve their scores.)