Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^ sounds like Penn State would be right up his alley.
It was during a Penn State tour.![]()
They accepted him anyway.![]()
*lowers head, walks backwards out of the thread and goes to pick up the silly little goose*
PSU stats
Test Scores -- 25th / 75th Percentile
SAT Critical Reading: 530 / 630
SAT Math: 560 / 670
SAT Writing: 540 / 640
55% admit rate
would assume this to be higher for OOS and receiving merit aid
definitely not an "average child"
When will people stop throwing out numbers as if they're gospel? There are so many other factors that come into play.
An art portfolio could be one. Secondly, I didn't say they offered him merit aid. I said that many state unis did. I did not say Penn State was one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree. My parents don't get it at all-- they think I need to push my dd more in everything. She's 8 and doing really well, but (in their minds) not as well as she *could* be doing. Sigh.
I think she'll be awesome at life because she enjoys herself so much.
She's 8! EIGHT! E-I-G-H-T!!! Sheesh!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^ sounds like Penn State would be right up his alley.
It was during a Penn State tour.![]()
They accepted him anyway.![]()
*lowers head, walks backwards out of the thread and goes to pick up the silly little goose*
PSU stats
Test Scores -- 25th / 75th Percentile
SAT Critical Reading: 530 / 630
SAT Math: 560 / 670
SAT Writing: 540 / 640
55% admit rate
would assume this to be higher for OOS and receiving merit aid
definitely not an "average child"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^ sounds like Penn State would be right up his alley.
It was during a Penn State tour.![]()
They accepted him anyway.![]()
*lowers head, walks backwards out of the thread and goes to pick up the silly little goose*
Anonymous wrote:I agree. My parents don't get it at all-- they think I need to push my dd more in everything. She's 8 and doing really well, but (in their minds) not as well as she *could* be doing. Sigh.
I think she'll be awesome at life because she enjoys herself so much.
Anonymous wrote:^ sounds like Penn State would be right up his alley.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do they give merit scholarships to "average" kids? Seriously, I'd like to know because I have a real one.
Must EVERYTHING around these parts turn into a competition??!!!
Are we now competing to see whose child is more average????
Is this thread going to become "No, my child is more average than yours. Ha!"
I am curious though. What is your child's GPA and what makes yours more average than mine.
I really can't imagine it gets lazier than what I have at home. I just can't.
Was your child's only question on every college tour about where the best parties take place? How often? And is drinking allowed?See. This is what I'm dealing with.
![]()
Anonymous wrote:Do they give merit scholarships to "average" kids? Seriously, I'd like to know because I have a real one.
See. This is what I'm dealing with.
Anonymous wrote:^ so getting merit scholarships is just "average"? O.k.![]()
Anonymous wrote:As the parent of a SN kid I would say I would love to have an average kid! Sounds like you guys are in a good place. Enjoy it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some of these threads make me wonder if there's something wrong with me being okay that my child is quite typical and average.
DS is wonderful, smart, funny, socially adept but somewhat lazy both academically and personally. He half-asses his chores; his cleaning never measures up to my standard of cleanliness. He gets good grades but won't overexert himself. AP? What's that? IB? Why?
In short, he's that typical lazy teen boy you see on sitcoms. He was accepted at several state universities with merit scholarships to boot. But there was no way the Ivies were going to target him in their mailings.
He needs to get on the ball with some things for sure. But he's 18 and will grow into greater maturity and responsibility just like I did. Truth is, he's light years ahead of where he was at my age. And I turned out quite well.![]()
I realize this is a different time. College admissions is a cut-throat game, etc. But some on his board seem to promote the notion that a child must be enrolled in all APs, play sports every season on top of a ton of ECs and a part-time job. Then said child must major in STEM. Anything else will produce an unproductive lazy ass who ends of living in his parents' basement.
I'll add to my DS's list of failings: He's planning to major in Art.He's an unbelievable talent and I advised him to follow his passions.
Is there something wrong with me?![]()
Then he's not "average." What is this, a humblebrag?![]()
Anonymous wrote:Sorry to rain on your parade but your child is not average at all; he's above average just not outstanding or exceptional. You don't know what an average 18-yo HS kid has in front of them.