Anonymous wrote:In our school district some of these honors come fairly easily if the kid meets the prerequisites.
-A student taking language AP, is very well positioned to get the seal of biliteracy and also be in the Foreign Language Honor Society
-A students with great GPA and some service component to their ECs will need to only put minimal effort to be in NHS or other honor societies.
-A student with 1580-1600 in SAT would not have a problem being a NMS finalist.
To make it effortless, students and parents need to know what the prerequisites are from start of HS. If NHS expects you to have 3.5 GPA and 60 hours of service hours during HS, these need to be addressed during the freshman and sophomore year, so that the student gains admission in NHS during junior year and is able to avail of the opportunities from this society.
My kid goes in a competitive school and mostly all of the peers will have similar stats. Being in NHS may not help, but not being in NHS will stand out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If her kid really wants to know if colleges care she would take the initiative to ask her guidance counselor. This is not kid driven, it’s helicopter mother driven.
This is the perfect example of a situation where the mother should back off.
This is a perfect example of a situation where you should mind your own business. Do you really think a school counselor is going to tell a student that it's not worth joining a club, especially the NJHS, because colleges don't care about it, even if it's true? This board is more likely to provide unbiased information. That is, of course, if it isn't detailed by some nutter who thinks parents shouldn't help their kids get useful information to make an informed decision. Are you worried that if other parents help their kids make informed decisions your child can't complete, so you're trying to convince others to not hep their kids? Sad.
No, PP I agree completely with you. It makes far more sense to solicit anonymous opinions from parents about NHS than to ask a school guidance counselor. Take, for example, the parent who opined that elite colleges don’t care at all about NHS and the OP’s response to that person that she was “very helpful.” Sure, rely on that anonymous opinion instead of someone who actually has experience. Ok
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If her kid really wants to know if colleges care she would take the initiative to ask her guidance counselor. This is not kid driven, it’s helicopter mother driven.
This is the perfect example of a situation where the mother should back off.
This is a perfect example of a situation where you should mind your own business. Do you really think a school counselor is going to tell a student that it's not worth joining a club, especially the NJHS, because colleges don't care about it, even if it's true? This board is more likely to provide unbiased information. That is, of course, if it isn't detailed by some nutter who thinks parents shouldn't help their kids get useful information to make an informed decision. Are you worried that if other parents help their kids make informed decisions your child can't complete, so you're trying to convince others to not hep their kids? Sad.
No, PP I agree completely with you. It makes far more sense to solicit anonymous opinions from parents about NHS than to ask a school guidance counselor. Take, for example, the parent who opined that elite colleges don’t care at all about NHS and the OP’s response to that person that she was “very helpful.” Sure, rely on that anonymous opinion instead of someone who actually has experience. Ok
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If her kid really wants to know if colleges care she would take the initiative to ask her guidance counselor. This is not kid driven, it’s helicopter mother driven.
This is the perfect example of a situation where the mother should back off.
This is a perfect example of a situation where you should mind your own business. Do you really think a school counselor is going to tell a student that it's not worth joining a club, especially the NJHS, because colleges don't care about it, even if it's true? This board is more likely to provide unbiased information. That is, of course, if it isn't detailed by some nutter who thinks parents shouldn't help their kids get useful information to make an informed decision. Are you worried that if other parents help their kids make informed decisions your child can't complete, so you're trying to convince others to not hep their kids? Sad.
Anonymous wrote:If her kid really wants to know if colleges care she would take the initiative to ask her guidance counselor. This is not kid driven, it’s helicopter mother driven.
This is the perfect example of a situation where the mother should back off.
Anonymous wrote:At highly competitive colleges, no, they definitely do not care as the boundaries for NHS at most HS are far lower than theirs for admission.
At other competitive colleges they also don't care very much since they can see all your stats anyway.
Extremely unlikely an admin is ever going to say "I have two applicants of equal quality except NHS, so I'll take that one".
If time is a concern, better to focus on what makes you special.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do you mean “we” are trying to decide? This should be left entirely up to your daughter and you need to stay out of it.
Oh please go away. Let the mom help her kid. You anti-helicopter parents are a$$holes.
There are helicopter parents and there are helicopter parents. This is NHS, it’s not choosing college or a husband. It’s a standard high school activity that any kid smart enough to be invited to join is smart enough to decide on her own. You people are all nuts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do you mean “we” are trying to decide? This should be left entirely up to your daughter and you need to stay out of it.
Oh please go away. Let the mom help her kid. You anti-helicopter parents are a$$holes.