Anonymous wrote:Thank you. You are also describing my DS to at t. Tearing down kids who get accepted to these school seems to be a hobby for some people.Anonymous wrote:BA. My Ivy bound son who has similar credentials is not the smartest kid I know. He is the hardest working and is kind and dependable. Why do u feel the need to be so hostile? I'm sure your child will do fine. Why do u attack mine?
Anonymous wrote:This profile isn't all that different from 20 years ago. When I got into H I had:
* 3 sports, captain in one, multiple year coach's award in another
* Major statewide competition winner 2 years running
* President of National Honor Society
* Class president
* Don't remember GPA, but it was good
* SAT: 800 V, 690 M, 800 W
* Founder of one school club, officer in others
The only thing I don't remember was counting community service hours. That seems new to me. Although if it had been a thing, I would have had a lot.
I know that admissions for HYPS+ have become somewhat more competitive. But I don't buy that it's an order of magnitude difference, or that "the profile" is an unreasonable or superhuman ask.
Anonymous wrote:The state of college admissions today is quite shocking to me. I graduated high school in 2000, and I got accepted at some really impressive schools and so did my peers. My niece graduates from that same high school in a few weeks. Her GPA is higher than mine was PLUS she captained a Varsity team (I did not play a sport, nor did I hold a leadership position in any of my extracurricular clubs). She was rejected from schools in our home state that my friends and I scoffed at. I just can't believe the difference.
Anonymous wrote:
Feel better now?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This profile isn't all that different from 20 years ago. When I got into H I had:
* 3 sports, captain in one, multiple year coach's award in another
* Major statewide competition winner 2 years running
* President of National Honor Society
* Class president
* Don't remember GPA, but it was good
* SAT: 800 V, 690 M, 800 W
* Founder of one school club, officer in others
The only thing I don't remember was counting community service hours. That seems new to me. Although if it had been a thing, I would have had a lot.
I know that admissions for HYPS+ have become somewhat more competitive. But I don't buy that it's an order of magnitude difference, or that "the profile" is an unreasonable or superhuman ask.
Wow, that's a crappy math score.
Feel better now?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This profile isn't all that different from 20 years ago. When I got into H I had:
* 3 sports, captain in one, multiple year coach's award in another
* Major statewide competition winner 2 years running
* President of National Honor Society
* Class president
* Don't remember GPA, but it was good
* SAT: 800 V, 690 M, 800 W
* Founder of one school club, officer in others
The only thing I don't remember was counting community service hours. That seems new to me. Although if it had been a thing, I would have had a lot.
I know that admissions for HYPS+ have become somewhat more competitive. But I don't buy that it's an order of magnitude difference, or that "the profile" is an unreasonable or superhuman ask.
Wow, that's a crappy math score.
Anonymous wrote:This profile isn't all that different from 20 years ago. When I got into H I had:
* 3 sports, captain in one, multiple year coach's award in another
* Major statewide competition winner 2 years running
* President of National Honor Society
* Class president
* Don't remember GPA, but it was good
* SAT: 800 V, 690 M, 800 W
* Founder of one school club, officer in others
The only thing I don't remember was counting community service hours. That seems new to me. Although if it had been a thing, I would have had a lot.
I know that admissions for HYPS+ have become somewhat more competitive. But I don't buy that it's an order of magnitude difference, or that "the profile" is an unreasonable or superhuman ask.
Anonymous wrote:This profile isn't all that different from 20 years ago. When I got into H I had:
* 3 sports, captain in one, multiple year coach's award in another
* Major statewide competition winner 2 years running
* President of National Honor Society
* Class president
* Don't remember GPA, but it was good
* SAT: 800 V, 690 M, 800 W
* Founder of one school club, officer in others
The only thing I don't remember was counting community service hours. That seems new to me. Although if it had been a thing, I would have had a lot.
I know that admissions for HYPS+ have become somewhat more competitive. But I don't buy that it's an order of magnitude difference, or that "the profile" is an unreasonable or superhuman ask.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child has a profile that is close to that but he does not have straight As (3.7) or high SAT ... He is dyslexic, he won't even get accepted to UMD.
PlAys instrument
Hundreds of volunteer hours because he enjoys it starting in 6th
Plays on 2 sports teams at the highest level, always captain
Helped raise $200k with his friend that has cancer
Created his own company
Clubs
Knows sign language
Has worked a summer job since he was in 6th grade
Is a soccer referee
He does these things because he likes them. He will go somewhere good enough and be fine.
Why do you think your son will not get into UMD because he has dyslexia? My DC with dyslexia was admitted to the UMD-CP Honors College this year.
His verbal SAT is too low. His counselor said its not probable. He has all Bs in English.
What was your child's GPA/SAT.
Thank you. You are also describing my DS to at t. Tearing down kids who get accepted to these school seems to be a hobby for some people.Anonymous wrote:BA. My Ivy bound son who has similar credentials is not the smartest kid I know. He is the hardest working and is kind and dependable. Why do u feel the need to be so hostile? I'm sure your child will do fine. Why do u attack mine?
Perhaps you should paint with such a broad stroke. I know a lot of kids who are not at Ivys are are set to go next year. Not a single one fits your description. The ones who "parroted" didn't make the cut.Anonymous wrote:The truth of the matter is, these "super" kids are a mile wide an 1" deep. They get very good at discussing other people's work like it was their own. They get very good at parroting things they don't really understand.
I learned long ago to avoid this kind of kid in my university lab. They do nothing. They care more about checking boxes than actually doing work.