Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP you didn't say what your GPA was, or what you majored in. Do you think those factors could make a difference?
4.0 GPA, thats a given for these rural school. They just aren't that rigorous. Your teachers have degrees from community college + local commuter college. Totally different world than the schools my kids are attending.
I majored in engineering -- I needed a major that would allow me to work and support myself after college -- the cost of Med or law school was completely unfathomable. My parents house sold for $60k in 2006; $100ks in loans for professional school? Completely outside my comfort zone. I needed to support myself and escape the rural vortex of my home town. I graduated in 2000, FYI. So not the 70s like PP.
Huh? Are you really saying that the typical rural high school student has a 4.0 GPA? You're out of your mind.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP you didn't say what your GPA was, or what you majored in. Do you think those factors could make a difference?
4.0 GPA, thats a given for these rural school. They just aren't that rigorous. Your teachers have degrees from community college + local commuter college. Totally different world than the schools my kids are attending.
I majored in engineering -- I needed a major that would allow me to work and support myself after college -- the cost of Med or law school was completely unfathomable. My parents house sold for $60k in 2006; $100ks in loans for professional school? Completely outside my comfort zone. I needed to support myself and escape the rural vortex of my home town. I graduated in 2000, FYI. So not the 70s like PP.
Anonymous wrote:1300 sat's and you got in? were you an athletic recruit?
i got shut out of all ivies with a 1490 and top 2% of my graduating class from PA. and this was 15 years ago.
yes i'm asian.
lol, my family made sure the other 3 siblings became recruited athletes. we learned about 'the game' the hard way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1300/1600 is very low for a white kid to be admitted to an ivy without a major hook. It sounds like this was many years ago, when it wasn't so difficult.
Ok maybe I am venturing into too much identifying info but my curiosity is getting the best of me
1) white male
2) college years 1996-2000 (seems like a long time ago and much harder now right?)
3) not athlete at all
4) trumpet in school band
5) only hook i can think of is Eagle Scout?
6) or the rural southern diversity element -- which apparently used to be very potent??
Not to humblebrag, but besides the ivy I attended, I was also accepted to MIT, Harvey Midd, Duke -- so there was some pervasive affirmative type action at that time. I was rejected from Harvard, my only rejection.
Does coming from rural schools still hold weight? Maybe I should move home to improve my kids chances. Nah, I was woefully unprepared for college; going from a far too easy high school to elite university was a shock, and honesty my confidence never recovered which was a factor in my very modest career (I would have ended up in same place am now if I had gone to State U).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP you didn't say what your GPA was, or what you majored in. Do you think those factors could make a difference?
4.0 GPA, thats a given for these rural school. They just aren't that rigorous. Your teachers have degrees from community college + local commuter college. Totally different world than the schools my kids are attending.
I majored in engineering -- I needed a major that would allow me to work and support myself after college -- the cost of Med or law school was completely unfathomable. My parents house sold for $60k in 2006; $100ks in loans for professional school? Completely outside my comfort zone. I needed to support myself and escape the rural vortex of my home town. I graduated in 2000, FYI. So not the 70s like PP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1300/1600 is very low for a white kid to be admitted to an ivy without a major hook. It sounds like this was many years ago, when it wasn't so difficult.
It depends on the year. When I took the SAT (1983) the average SAT at Harvard was a bit over 1300. They've recentered the SAT twice since then, so if that 1300 was from the 80's it was probably around the 98th percentile and about the same as a 1500 today.
Anonymous wrote:1300/1600 is very low for a white kid to be admitted to an ivy without a major hook. It sounds like this was many years ago, when it wasn't so difficult.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1300 sat's and you got in? were you an athletic recruit?
i got shut out of all ivies with a 1490 and top 2% of my graduating class from PA. and this was 15 years ago.
yes i'm asian.
lol, my family made sure the other 3 siblings became recruited athletes. we learned about 'the game' the hard way.
Rural PA?
Anonymous wrote:1300 sat's and you got in? were you an athletic recruit?
i got shut out of all ivies with a 1490 and top 2% of my graduating class from PA. and this was 15 years ago.
yes i'm asian.
lol, my family made sure the other 3 siblings became recruited athletes. we learned about 'the game' the hard way.
Anonymous wrote:1300/1600 is very low for a white kid to be admitted to an ivy without a major hook. It sounds like this was many years ago, when it wasn't so difficult.
. Nah, I was woefully unprepared for college; going from a far too easy high school to elite university was a shock, and honesty my confidence never recovered which was a factor in my very modest career (I would have ended up in same place am now if I had gone to State U). Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1300 sat's and you got in? were you an athletic recruit?
i got shut out of all ivies with a 1490 and top 2% of my graduating class from PA. and this was 15 years ago.
yes i'm asian.
lol, my family made sure the other 3 siblings became recruited athletes. we learned about 'the game' the hard way.
1490 for an ivy is simply too low. This is not a shocker PP.