Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I follow a former college admissions counselor on Instagram and he just today gave his out of ten rankings for different activities- none scored a ten, but Eagle Scout was one of the few 9s he gave.
Can you share where to see this?
I follow so many of these accounts- sorry, I can’t find it or I’d link it. But Eagle Scout is super hard, shows years of dedication and work. I would agree that it’s gotta be a boost!
Thanks for responding, was just curious to see everything they mentioned. Have a friend with an Eagle Scout, I know it’s a long path.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just curious, how many percentage of graduating seniors are Eagle Scouts, including boys and girls? 1%?
The questions are:
1. What percentage of kids in selective admission pools are Eagle Scouts? It’s certainly higher than the overall percentage when you count kids not even applying to college.
2. If all other factors in an application are equal, do AO’s value Eagle Scout?
Anonymous wrote:Just curious, how many percentage of graduating seniors are Eagle Scouts, including boys and girls? 1%?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s not woke enough for young AO’s that prefer to see social justice activities. The exception is female Eagle Scouts.
Love that young women can earn Eagle now! I know two impressive young women who did so: one at Penn, one at Brown now. Regardless of gender I do think it's a strong EC, including leadership, service, and a long commitment. Still, you can never know with holistic admissions what's valued in a given year.
Anonymous wrote:Just curious, how many percentage of graduating seniors are Eagle Scouts, including boys and girls? 1%?
Anonymous wrote:How would anyone really know "how much" it helps? The only way you could assess this is if you have students with near identical credentials/characteristics, applying to the same school, one Eagle Scout and one not.
That said--it's hard to become an Eagle Scout-it's a decent EC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If DS is 15 then can he still join the Eagle Scout?
Absolutely, he can. But he won’t have enough time to become Eagle Scout. If that’s not his goal, there are still a lot of fun.
Anonymous wrote:It’s not woke enough for young AO’s that prefer to see social justice activities. The exception is female Eagle Scouts.
Anonymous wrote:If DS is 15 then can he still join the Eagle Scout?