Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This focus on elite colleges is so out of control. There a thousands of universities where your kid can get a terrific education -- find one that fits.
You don't have to go to Harvard to excel in this life.
Yeah, but what about those of us who can only afford in-state colleges? If my high achieving DD fails to get in UVA or W&M, her only other choices are much lower ranked than what she could attend if we had the means for out of state/private.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This focus on elite colleges is so out of control. There a thousands of universities where your kid can get a terrific education -- find one that fits.
You don't have to go to Harvard to excel in this life.
Yeah, but what about those of us who can only afford in-state colleges? If my high achieving DD fails to get in UVA or W&M, her only other choices are much lower ranked than what she could attend if we had the means for out of state/private.
Anonymous wrote:This focus on elite colleges is so out of control. There a thousands of universities where your kid can get a terrific education -- find one that fits.
You don't have to go to Harvard to excel in this life.
Anonymous wrote:
75% of applicants with SAT critical reading scores of 750-800 were turned down.
78% of those with SAT math scores of 750-800 were ultimately turned down.
77% of those with SAT writing scores of 750-800 were ultimately turned down.
77% of those with ACT scores of 34-36 were ultimately turned down.
It becomes worse on the lower end (85% of 700-740s or 30-33s ultimately turned down).
Worse-case gunners with those stats will still get into a top 25 university or a top 10 selective LAS. And they'll be drowning in 100% full ride scholarship offers from solid colleges around the US.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This focus on elite colleges is so out of control. There a thousands of universities where your kid can get a terrific education -- find one that fits.
You don't have to go to Harvard to excel in this life.
No, but it definitely helps. A lot.
Anonymous wrote:This focus on elite colleges is so out of control. There a thousands of universities where your kid can get a terrific education -- find one that fits.
You don't have to go to Harvard to excel in this life.
Anonymous wrote:I was linked to this profile by Amherst College, a prestigious liberal arts college with a 14% admit rate: https://www.amherst.edu/media/view/669797
According to this,
75% of applicants with SAT critical reading scores of 750-800 were turned down.
78% of those with SAT math scores of 750-800 were ultimately turned down.
77% of those with SAT writing scores of 750-800 were ultimately turned down.
77% of those with ACT scores of 34-36 were ultimately turned down.
It becomes worse on the lower end (85% of 700-740s or 30-33s ultimately turned down).
What's the point in wasting $60-$80 in applying to colleges like Stanford, Ivies, U'Chicago, Amherst, Pomona, etc. when doing the absolute best you can isn't enough to get in? When so many of the slots are taken by athletes, legacies, students of color, or low-income students? I just find this appalling, honestly. I know test scores aren't the best predictors, but most of these kids rank in the top of their class and have great extracurricular involvements to boot. Is the average valedictorian just not good enough for the top schools at this day and time?
Anonymous wrote:My numbers are rough, but they illustrate the point.
There are 37,000 public and private HSs in the USA, today including 26,000 public and 11,000 private. The number of public HSs has gone up from about 22,000 in 1980 but the sizes of freshman classes most likely have as well.
Harvard's freshman class is 2100 students and Amherst's is 470. If the average freshman class size is 1500 over the top 25 schools, there are roughly the same number of valedictorians as there are spots. Since a significant fraction of those spots are taken up by athletes and international students, being valedictorian HAS NEVER really been enough to ensure a spot at a top college.
Similarly, there are about 16,000 national merit semifinalists and 34,000 commended students competing for the lets say 32,000 non-athlete spots at top 25 schools. That leaves about 18,000 high scoring students out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was linked to this profile by Amherst College, a prestigious liberal arts college with a 14% admit rate: https://www.amherst.edu/media/view/669797
According to this,
75% of applicants with SAT critical reading scores of 750-800 were turned down.
78% of those with SAT math scores of 750-800 were ultimately turned down.
77% of those with SAT writing scores of 750-800 were ultimately turned down.
77% of those with ACT scores of 34-36 were ultimately turned down.
It becomes worse on the lower end (85% of 700-740s or 30-33s ultimately turned down).
What's the point in wasting $60-$80 in applying to colleges like Stanford, Ivies, U'Chicago, Amherst, Pomona, etc. when doing the absolute best you can isn't enough to get in? When so many of the slots are taken by athletes, legacies, students of color, or low-income students? I just find this appalling, honestly. I know test scores aren't the best predictors, but most of these kids rank in the top of their class and have great extracurricular involvements to boot. Is the average valedictorian just not good enough for the top schools at this day and time?
If you know that test scores aren't a good predictor, don't make yourself crazy by focusing on the test scores. There is so much more that goes into selecting kids for these types of schools. The key is to avoid ONLY applying to these types of schools. Use the college common data sets to see where your kids falls with test scores, grades, ranking and even geography. Then select a range of schools and include schools where your child's stats fall squarely in the average or above. IMO that's the mistake families make, not applying to a range of schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP you are forgetting the millions of foreign students, especially from China and India who are coming to the U.S. to study. They apply with perfect scores and get in because the colleges want diversity.
Amherst only admitted 5% of international students (https://www.amherst.edu/admission/apply/international/enrollment)
Anonymous wrote:I was linked to this profile by Amherst College, a prestigious liberal arts college with a 14% admit rate: https://www.amherst.edu/media/view/669797
According to this,
75% of applicants with SAT critical reading scores of 750-800 were turned down.
78% of those with SAT math scores of 750-800 were ultimately turned down.
77% of those with SAT writing scores of 750-800 were ultimately turned down.
77% of those with ACT scores of 34-36 were ultimately turned down.
It becomes worse on the lower end (85% of 700-740s or 30-33s ultimately turned down).
What's the point in wasting $60-$80 in applying to colleges like Stanford, Ivies, U'Chicago, Amherst, Pomona, etc. when doing the absolute best you can isn't enough to get in? When so many of the slots are taken by athletes, legacies, students of color, or low-income students? I just find this appalling, honestly. I know test scores aren't the best predictors, but most of these kids rank in the top of their class and have great extracurricular involvements to boot. Is the average valedictorian just not good enough for the top schools at this day and time?
Anonymous wrote:I was linked to this profile by Amherst College, a prestigious liberal arts college with a 14% admit rate: https://www.amherst.edu/media/view/669797
According to this,
75% of applicants with SAT critical reading scores of 750-800 were turned down.
78% of those with SAT math scores of 750-800 were ultimately turned down.
77% of those with SAT writing scores of 750-800 were ultimately turned down.
77% of those with ACT scores of 34-36 were ultimately turned down.
It becomes worse on the lower end (85% of 700-740s or 30-33s ultimately turned down).
What's the point in wasting $60-$80 in applying to colleges like Stanford, Ivies, U'Chicago, Amherst, Pomona, etc. when doing the absolute best you can isn't enough to get in? When so many of the slots are taken by athletes, legacies, students of color, or low-income students? I just find this appalling, honestly. I know test scores aren't the best predictors, but most of these kids rank in the top of their class and have great extracurricular involvements to boot. Is the average valedictorian just not good enough for the top schools at this day and time?