Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you keep it a secret or spill the beans on facebook pretty quickly? Are you hounded with questions on how you did it? Are there passive aggressive haters jealous their kid didn't get in some place that elite? Or maybe nobody really cares?
I think you should tell everyone but only whenever the conversation leads to that topic. Do not force it because then you will be perceived as a show off. But since you have kids applying to college sooner or later the topic will come up when talking to friends, relatives, colleagues etc. When it does then casually mention it.
People do get jealous for sure. Especially people whose kids were striving for HYPS but only got into lesser elites (i.e. non-HYP ivies, Duke, Chicago etc) are especially jealous.
So true, in the right circles a HYPS admission can cause a lot pf people to turn green of envy. If your kid goes to an elite private, find a parent you absolutely can't stand and whose kid got into a lower ivy or even better yet to a non-ivy. Then casually drop the HYPS bomb. The best revenge ever. Tried and true![]()
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2kw3ko_VyFs
Anonymous wrote:my guidance counselor, also my track coach, found on first and called me into his office with the Principal. Full ride, athletic scholarship. I think they told some teachers after that and it kind of buzzed around but most of the school didn't care whatsoever. same for the occidental, oberlin, other couple ivy kids.
Anonymous wrote:And DC conferred with Princeton graduates now in DC's chosen field and they said forget Princeton - not enough focus on undergrads ... which they can now see. Go figure.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you keep it a secret or spill the beans on facebook pretty quickly? Are you hounded with questions on how you did it? Are there passive aggressive haters jealous their kid didn't get in some place that elite? Or maybe nobody really cares?
I think you should tell everyone but only whenever the conversation leads to that topic. Do not force it because then you will be perceived as a show off. But since you have kids applying to college sooner or later the topic will come up when talking to friends, relatives, colleagues etc. When it does then casually mention it.
People do get jealous for sure. Especially people whose kids were striving for HYPS but only got into lesser elites (i.e. non-HYP ivies, Duke, Chicago etc) are especially jealous.
So true, in the right circles a HYPS admission can cause a lot pf people to turn green of envy. If your kid goes to an elite private, find a parent you absolutely can't stand and whose kid got into a lower ivy or even better yet to a non-ivy. Then casually drop the HYPS bomb. The best revenge ever. Tried and true![]()
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2kw3ko_VyFs
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you keep it a secret or spill the beans on facebook pretty quickly? Are you hounded with questions on how you did it? Are there passive aggressive haters jealous their kid didn't get in some place that elite? Or maybe nobody really cares?
I think you should tell everyone but only whenever the conversation leads to that topic. Do not force it because then you will be perceived as a show off. But since you have kids applying to college sooner or later the topic will come up when talking to friends, relatives, colleagues etc. When it does then casually mention it.
People do get jealous for sure. Especially people whose kids were striving for HYPS but only got into lesser elites (i.e. non-HYP ivies, Duke, Chicago etc) are especially jealous.
Anonymous wrote:No there isn't. Yale and Harvard are so different from each other. The students who pick Yale do so because of its great residential culture, great faculty relationships, community invested peers, and the liberal arts emphasis. Pick a selection of any 10 random students who got admitted to Yale if they'd take the offer to Harvard and I doubt more than 1 or 2 would. Sure Yale loses to cross-admits on a 60:40 ratio, but the 40% who pick Yale pick it for a reason.