Anonymous wrote:Outside of donating a million bucks, nothing demonstrates interest more than the selective summer program. Most kids loathe the thought of school during the summer, so it shows some real motivation to want to be at a specific college, get the vibe of campus, learn from PhD/masters candidates, and meet some motivated peers who also dream of going there. Also makes those "why college x" essays more genuine.
Only folks who rail against this are those bitter they're too broke to send their kids away or value the travel sports racket over academics.
Anonymous wrote:Will the precollege weeks help her during the admissions process? Who knows.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid did NIADH at WM this summer and took a graded 200 level class for college credit through the history program. I do not expect it to prop up a college app. At most, it’s a small nudge because it’s a show of demonstrated interest, which WM cares about. .
But, my kid loves history is looking at SLACs. And WM topped his list late junior year. The three weeks on campus made them more comfortable with the idea of college and helped them focus in on what they did and did not want. After NIADH, my kid is still apply to SLACs, but WM is more like 3rd or 4th choice. They said that there were great things about the school, but also things they were less excited about.
So money well spent.
But no, I doubt it would be the deciding factor on WM’s side. It might be a deciding factor for my kid though.
Thanks for explaining it so nicely.
Personally, I don't think I have enough money for that kind of discovery, but we'll see.
It was expensive. More expensive than I would normally consider. But this particular kid is 2E, and finding a good college fit and giving them the confidence that they could navigate a college campus is turning out to be extremely important. They inherited money from a great grandparent, which has been set aside for college. I let them dip into it for pre-college, because I think launching this particular kid is going to be a challenge. If they end up with a bad match and flunk out or need to transfer, that’s a lot of money lost. So, there was a cost-benefit Assessment, not just blindly writing a check.
My other kid is very different. I’m not sure I would send them to a pre-college program unless it was very specialized and specific. But, I would let them withdraw some money to spend some time in an overseas program one summer. For various reasons, I think this would be great for them.
Do your children use the pronoun "they" or something?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid did NIADH at WM this summer and took a graded 200 level class for college credit through the history program. I do not expect it to prop up a college app. At most, it’s a small nudge because it’s a show of demonstrated interest, which WM cares about. .
But, my kid loves history is looking at SLACs. And WM topped his list late junior year. The three weeks on campus made them more comfortable with the idea of college and helped them focus in on what they did and did not want. After NIADH, my kid is still apply to SLACs, but WM is more like 3rd or 4th choice. They said that there were great things about the school, but also things they were less excited about.
So money well spent.
But no, I doubt it would be the deciding factor on WM’s side. It might be a deciding factor for my kid though.
Thanks for explaining it so nicely.
Personally, I don't think I have enough money for that kind of discovery, but we'll see.
It was expensive. More expensive than I would normally consider. But this particular kid is 2E, and finding a good college fit and giving them the confidence that they could navigate a college campus is turning out to be extremely important. They inherited money from a great grandparent, which has been set aside for college. I let them dip into it for pre-college, because I think launching this particular kid is going to be a challenge. If they end up with a bad match and flunk out or need to transfer, that’s a lot of money lost. So, there was a cost-benefit Assessment, not just blindly writing a check.
My other kid is very different. I’m not sure I would send them to a pre-college program unless it was very specialized and specific. But, I would let them withdraw some money to spend some time in an overseas program one summer. For various reasons, I think this would be great for them.
Do your children use the pronoun "they" or something?
It's called normal speech.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid did NIADH at WM this summer and took a graded 200 level class for college credit through the history program. I do not expect it to prop up a college app. At most, it’s a small nudge because it’s a show of demonstrated interest, which WM cares about. .
But, my kid loves history is looking at SLACs. And WM topped his list late junior year. The three weeks on campus made them more comfortable with the idea of college and helped them focus in on what they did and did not want. After NIADH, my kid is still apply to SLACs, but WM is more like 3rd or 4th choice. They said that there were great things about the school, but also things they were less excited about.
So money well spent.
But no, I doubt it would be the deciding factor on WM’s side. It might be a deciding factor for my kid though.
Thanks for explaining it so nicely.
Personally, I don't think I have enough money for that kind of discovery, but we'll see.
It was expensive. More expensive than I would normally consider. But this particular kid is 2E, and finding a good college fit and giving them the confidence that they could navigate a college campus is turning out to be extremely important. They inherited money from a great grandparent, which has been set aside for college. I let them dip into it for pre-college, because I think launching this particular kid is going to be a challenge. If they end up with a bad match and flunk out or need to transfer, that’s a lot of money lost. So, there was a cost-benefit Assessment, not just blindly writing a check.
My other kid is very different. I’m not sure I would send them to a pre-college program unless it was very specialized and specific. But, I would let them withdraw some money to spend some time in an overseas program one summer. For various reasons, I think this would be great for them.
Do your children use the pronoun "they" or something?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t know if any of them are offered for college credit but I think they all purport to be at the level of a college class.
Well if that had been the point you responded to, and the point of the OP, then your post would be well taken.
Unfortunately it is neither.
Cool story bro
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid did NIADH at WM this summer and took a graded 200 level class for college credit through the history program. I do not expect it to prop up a college app. At most, it’s a small nudge because it’s a show of demonstrated interest, which WM cares about. .
But, my kid loves history is looking at SLACs. And WM topped his list late junior year. The three weeks on campus made them more comfortable with the idea of college and helped them focus in on what they did and did not want. After NIADH, my kid is still apply to SLACs, but WM is more like 3rd or 4th choice. They said that there were great things about the school, but also things they were less excited about.
So money well spent.
But no, I doubt it would be the deciding factor on WM’s side. It might be a deciding factor for my kid though.
Thanks for explaining it so nicely.
Personally, I don't think I have enough money for that kind of discovery, but we'll see.
It was expensive. More expensive than I would normally consider. But this particular kid is 2E, and finding a good college fit and giving them the confidence that they could navigate a college campus is turning out to be extremely important. They inherited money from a great grandparent, which has been set aside for college. I let them dip into it for pre-college, because I think launching this particular kid is going to be a challenge. If they end up with a bad match and flunk out or need to transfer, that’s a lot of money lost. So, there was a cost-benefit Assessment, not just blindly writing a check.
My other kid is very different. I’m not sure I would send them to a pre-college program unless it was very specialized and specific. But, I would let them withdraw some money to spend some time in an overseas program one summer. For various reasons, I think this would be great for them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t know if any of them are offered for college credit but I think they all purport to be at the level of a college class.
Well if that had been the point you responded to, and the point of the OP, then your post would be well taken.
Unfortunately it is neither.