Anonymous wrote:It would be next to impossible for her to get into 5 of her choices, and I don’t want her to feel really bad about her backup choices.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe tell her to ask more pointed question to the counselor, e.g. “have any unhooked student with my stats got to school X in the past 3 years? What % of the students like me have been rejected?” With my son, after questions like these it became clear that HYP are futile.
This is good advice. It also makes it less personal and emotional and more about the data.
Anonymous wrote:Oops,forgot to ask. Does her school’s GC involve the parents? Perhaps you could ask more specific information with your DD in the room.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Usually they suggest applying to 7:
2 reaches
2 safeties
5 good bets
The guidance counselor probably doesn’t want to crush your kid’s spirit and has probably had her fill of parents who think their kid is Ivy League material when they’re not.
That adds up to 9.
Anonymous wrote:Usually they suggest applying to 7:
2 reaches
2 safeties
5 good bets
The guidance counselor probably doesn’t want to crush your kid’s spirit and has probably had her fill of parents who think their kid is Ivy League material when they’re not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m AA and have several friends who are HYPS grads who were discouraged from applying and instead steered towards UIUC, GWU, Rutgers, Rochester by guidance counselors. I had such a different experience in HS and in fact wish that I’d taken my GC’s advice. I’ve seen my friends’ experiences echoed in some of the Black@“eliteschoolname” posts on IG this year. My takeaway is that GCs are a crapshoot and their advice should be taken with a grain of salt, unless families you know and trust with similar profiles vouch for them.
Did you ever think this was b/c HYPS schools are hard to get into and not about race. How do you know that the same guidance counselors didn’t give similar advice to white students.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe tell her to ask more pointed question to the counselor, e.g. “have any unhooked student with my stats got to school X in the past 3 years? What % of the students like me have been rejected?” With my son, after questions like these it became clear that HYP are futile.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe tell her to ask more pointed question to the counselor, e.g. “have any unhooked student with my stats got to school X in the past 3 years? What % of the students like me have been rejected?” With my son, after questions like these it became clear that HYP are futile.
Anonymous wrote:My DD gets all As and Bs at a DC private school, high 1400s on the one SAT she took so far. She has some interesting extracurriculars. She hasn’t won any awards, has no “hooks,” isn’t into varsity sports. She’s a good kid, works hard, but there are kids at her school who are true standouts. She’s just not at that level.
DD has very high-ranked schools on her list that she’s discussed with her counselor. The counselor said things like, “well, those are pretty hard to get into,” but hasn’t come right out and said she should probably not waste an ED on them. She has some safety schools on the list, too, but she truly thinks she has a shot at the top ones on her list. She constantly talks about which one she might apply ED.
I love my kid and don’t want to be the one to burst her bubble, but unless she does a lot better on the SAT (if she even takes it again) and somehow distinguishes herself, I just don’t see her being able to “beat out” these superstars that will apply to the same universities.
How honest are counselors generally with their students and is, “X is hard to get into” a euphemism for, “you probably won’t get accepted”? I assume once school starts again the counselors will have more serious talks with the students. But would they really come right out and say, “if you want to ED, why not consider.....” and give realistic options?
I want her to make her own decisions, but with honest guidance from the counselor. I’m just worried she might get the, “apply where you really want to go,” talk.
My DD was exactly like your DD - same stats, no hooks. She did not get into the one reach school on her list - Vassar. She got in everywhere else she applied and didn't dwell on it. I agree with you, you want your DD to have appropriate expectations. It's still very early in the process, I wouldn't worry about it yet.
Anonymous wrote:Eh, guidance counselors are a joke. They have their own interests. My son went to public school and his gc kept suggesting Rutgers. He told her, "I hate New Jersey; I wouldn't go to any school in that state even if that's the only place I got in." She discouraged him from applying anywhere else.
He went to Stanford. He sent her a postcard.