Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For Whitman - arguable one of the top 5 public schools in the country. Billed as the best public high school in the area.
Yale - 17 applied - 1 got in
Harvard - 25 applied - 2 got in
Princeton - 22 applied - 2 got in
That is about the same as the broader admissions pool.
Not impressive and not the same as the Big 3.
Public schools parents rant as rave - save your money -- in this case - it appears money was saved and the results were nowhere near the same.
You need to take a trip on over to the "Any Parents Disappointed With College Placement?" thread. There you can check out the lists from elite privates for non-HYP acceptances/matriculations, and while you're there you can ogle all the nasty posters calling, for example, certain STA results dismal and worse.
According to a recent Sidwell publication University of Michigan was the number one school in terms of both applicants (26 out of a class of about 120, or 22%) AND Sidwell students attending. At Whitman it's second to UMD in terms of number of applicants (100 applicants out of about 450 students, or 22%), and probably number attending as well. According to that same publication 2 or fewer Sidwell students went to Princeton and Yale, 3 to Harvard. Not too dissimilar. By contrast, Sidwell has one going to Penn while 7 were admitted from Whitman.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For Whitman - arguable one of the top 5 public schools in the country. Billed as the best public high school in the area.
Yale - 17 applied - 1 got in
Harvard - 25 applied - 2 got in
Princeton - 22 applied - 2 got in
That is about the same as the broader admissions pool.
Not impressive and not the same as the Big 3.
Public schools parents rant as rave - save your money -- in this case - it appears money was saved and the results were nowhere near the same.
LOL, so true! And in some cases, money may not even have been saved. I always laugh at the "save your money" people, who then go on to send their kids to schools where you have to buy an $800k+ home to even be in the boundaries to go there. Hardly a "public" school...
You don't understand that buying an $800k house is "saving" (building equity) compared to writing tuition checks? To quote another recent poster, please take the free course on the benefits of home ownership.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For Whitman - arguable one of the top 5 public schools in the country. Billed as the best public high school in the area.
Yale - 17 applied - 1 got in
Harvard - 25 applied - 2 got in
Princeton - 22 applied - 2 got in
That is about the same as the broader admissions pool.
Not impressive and not the same as the Big 3.
Public schools parents rant as rave - save your money -- in this case - it appears money was saved and the results were nowhere near the same.
LOL, so true! And in some cases, money may not even have been saved. I always laugh at the "save your money" people, who then go on to send their kids to schools where you have to buy an $800k+ home to even be in the boundaries to go there. Hardly a "public" school...
Anonymous wrote:For Whitman - arguable one of the top 5 public schools in the country. Billed as the best public high school in the area.
Yale - 17 applied - 1 got in
Harvard - 25 applied - 2 got in
Princeton - 22 applied - 2 got in
That is about the same as the broader admissions pool.
Not impressive and not the same as the Big 3.
Public schools parents rant as rave - save your money -- in this case - it appears money was saved and the results were nowhere near the same.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:According to a recent Sidwell publication ...
I'm very curious -- what publication is this? Please post a link or a copy, so we all can see it!
Anonymous wrote:According to a recent Sidwell publication ...
Anonymous wrote:
According to a recent Sidwell publication University of Michigan was the number one school in terms of both applicants (26 out of a class of about 120, or 22%) AND Sidwell students attending. At Whitman it's second to UMD in terms of number of applicants (100 applicants out of about 450 students, or 22%), and probably number attending as well. According to that same publication 2 or fewer Sidwell students went to Princeton and Yale, 3 to Harvard. Not too dissimilar. By contrast, Sidwell has one going to Penn while 7 were admitted from Whitman.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I somehow get the sense there is some "conclusion first, rationale second" analysis going on here.
I somehow get the sense that you don't appreciate the validity of the points being made.
Exactly what points have you made? I just see someone trying to denigrate private schools without any factual support. Please show me some position supported by facts.
Not the PP you are quoting, but what seems to have happened is that someone posted public school college admission stats on the private school board to poke fun at the public schools. Who is doing the deinigrating?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I somehow get the sense there is some "conclusion first, rationale second" analysis going on here.
I somehow get the sense that you don't appreciate the validity of the points being made.
Exactly what points have you made? I just see someone trying to denigrate private schools without any factual support. Please show me some position supported by facts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I somehow get the sense there is some "conclusion first, rationale second" analysis going on here.
I somehow get the sense that you don't appreciate the validity of the points being made.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For Whitman - arguable one of the top 5 public schools in the country. Billed as the best public high school in the area.
Yale - 17 applied - 1 got in
Harvard - 25 applied - 2 got in
Princeton - 22 applied - 2 got in
That is about the same as the broader admissions pool.
Not impressive and not the same as the Big 3.
Public schools parents rant as rave - save your money -- in this case - it appears money was saved and the results were nowhere near the same.
You need to take a trip on over to the "Any Parents Disappointed With College Placement?" thread. There you can check out the lists from elite privates for non-HYP acceptances/matriculations, and while you're there you can ogle all the nasty posters calling, for example, certain STA results dismal and worse.
Anonymous wrote:For Whitman - arguable one of the top 5 public schools in the country. Billed as the best public high school in the area.
Yale - 17 applied - 1 got in
Harvard - 25 applied - 2 got in
Princeton - 22 applied - 2 got in
That is about the same as the broader admissions pool.
Not impressive and not the same as the Big 3.
Public schools parents rant as rave - save your money -- in this case - it appears money was saved and the results were nowhere near the same.
Anonymous wrote:I somehow get the sense there is some "conclusion first, rationale second" analysis going on here.
Anonymous wrote:For Whitman - arguable one of the top 5 public schools in the country. Billed as the best public high school in the area.
Yale - 17 applied - 1 got in
Harvard - 25 applied - 2 got in
Princeton - 22 applied - 2 got in
That is about the same as the broader admissions pool.
Not impressive and not the same as the Big 3.
Public schools parents rant as rave - save your money -- in this case - it appears money was saved and the results were nowhere near the same.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Keep in mind that in public schools there is no one telling you you can't apply to certain schools.
So private schools can tell a student they can't apply to a certain college? As a parent I'd be p/o about that. If I'm paying for the applications, my kid will apply where I want her to, be it from a public or private school. The results are hers to own, not the school's.