Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:25% admit rate is still higher than NOVA!
WRONG. Fairfax: 36 percent admit rate; Arlington 35; Loudoun 30. 1843 students from these counties admitted in 2019. ONE from Allegheny County.
Anonymous wrote:
Coming out of Covington, VA? Sure, probably has a shot.
Coming out of NOVA? No. If you read the EA thread, you will see multiple legacy applicants, URMs (legacy and URMs!), strong ECs, etc., with similar or better stats and APs that were outright rejected in the EA round.
UVA decided to feast at the ED and EA smorgasbord, knowing that in-state tuition would give it a heads up in our pandemic-stricken application year. I don't like it, but I also would have done the same. UVA spotted a market deficiency and jumped at it. But it sucks being on the receiving end.
Anonymous wrote:25% admit rate is still higher than NOVA!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly, the odds are not great. UVA likes to see kids in top 5-10% of graduating class (echoing the other posts regarding the GPA number). If the 4.3 puts your kid in top 5% then there is a chance. SAT north of 1500 also would help. It is true that RD pool will be very competitive given the stats for deferrals (TJ-esque applicants) that have been posted in other threads.
Hope you have plan B in place. A self motivated student would do just fine no matter where he/she enrolls.
Coming out of Covington, VA? Sure, probably has a shot.
Coming out of NOVA? No. If you read the EA thread, you will see multiple legacy applicants, URMs (legacy and URMs!), strong ECs, etc., with similar or better stats and APs that were outright rejected in the EA round.
UVA decided to feast at the ED and EA smorgasbord, knowing that in-state tuition would give it a heads up in our pandemic-stricken application year. I don't like it, but I also would have done the same. UVA spotted a market deficiency and jumped at it. But it sucks being on the receiving end.
Anonymous wrote:Honestly, the odds are not great. UVA likes to see kids in top 5-10% of graduating class (echoing the other posts regarding the GPA number). If the 4.3 puts your kid in top 5% then there is a chance. SAT north of 1500 also would help. It is true that RD pool will be very competitive given the stats for deferrals (TJ-esque applicants) that have been posted in other threads.
Hope you have plan B in place. A self motivated student would do just fine no matter where he/she enrolls.
you need to be in the top 5% of the class
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS HAS GPA 4.3 AND SAT 1430 WITH A FAIR AMOUNT OF GOOD ECS, APPLIED FOR CS, WHAT ARE THE CHANCES FOR ACCEPTANCE.
Depends on essays, course load rigor, and high school. The chance is certainly not zero as the PP said. We had lots of defers at our high school during the EA round. Many schools don't do class rank, but your son needs to be in the top 5%. A 4.3 at our high school is top 10%. We have a 6 point grading scale, so GPAs can be misleading.
According to the GPA/SAT comparison, OP's son likely doesn't have the course/school rigor such as those at TJ. So the chance is slim.
You can't compare GPA until you know the high school.
Here's an example from this year:
Lots of kids in our high school were deferred during EA. Only 4 kids got in that we know of so far (I think there are a few more, but can't confirm). Those GPAs range from 4.3 - 4.5. My DS (4.39, test optional) got in, but some kids with 4.5s didn't. To have a fighting chance, you need to be in the top 5% of the class. You simply can't look at stats and determine who has a chance and who doesn't. A 4.5 in our school is just about a 4.0 UW. I'd have to do the math, but a 4.6 is just about the max you can get to with some of the required 4.0 weighted classes.
Is the reference above is TJ?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS HAS GPA 4.3 AND SAT 1430 WITH A FAIR AMOUNT OF GOOD ECS, APPLIED FOR CS, WHAT ARE THE CHANCES FOR ACCEPTANCE.
Depends on essays, course load rigor, and high school. The chance is certainly not zero as the PP said. We had lots of defers at our high school during the EA round. Many schools don't do class rank, but your son needs to be in the top 5%. A 4.3 at our high school is top 10%. We have a 6 point grading scale, so GPAs can be misleading.
According to the GPA/SAT comparison, OP's son likely doesn't have the course/school rigor such as those at TJ. So the chance is slim.
You can't compare GPA until you know the high school.
Here's an example from this year:
Lots of kids in our high school were deferred during EA. Only 4 kids got in that we know of so far (I think there are a few more, but can't confirm). Those GPAs range from 4.3 - 4.5. My DS (4.39, test optional) got in, but some kids with 4.5s didn't. To have a fighting chance, you need to be in the top 5% of the class. You simply can't look at stats and determine who has a chance and who doesn't. A 4.5 in our school is just about a 4.0 UW. I'd have to do the math, but a 4.6 is just about the max you can get to with some of the required 4.0 weighted classes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS HAS GPA 4.3 AND SAT 1430 WITH A FAIR AMOUNT OF GOOD ECS, APPLIED FOR CS, WHAT ARE THE CHANCES FOR ACCEPTANCE.
Depends on essays, course load rigor, and high school. The chance is certainly not zero as the PP said. We had lots of defers at our high school during the EA round. Many schools don't do class rank, but your son needs to be in the top 5%. A 4.3 at our high school is top 10%. We have a 6 point grading scale, so GPAs can be misleading.
According to the GPA/SAT comparison, OP's son likely doesn't have the course/school rigor such as those at TJ. So the chance is slim.
You can't compare GPA until you know the high school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS HAS GPA 4.3 AND SAT 1430 WITH A FAIR AMOUNT OF GOOD ECS, APPLIED FOR CS, WHAT ARE THE CHANCES FOR ACCEPTANCE.
Depends on essays, course load rigor, and high school. The chance is certainly not zero as the PP said. We had lots of defers at our high school during the EA round. Many schools don't do class rank, but your son needs to be in the top 5%. A 4.3 at our high school is top 10%. We have a 6 point grading scale, so GPAs can be misleading.
According to the GPA/SAT comparison, OP's son likely doesn't have the course/school rigor such as those at TJ. So the chance is slim.
You can't compare GPA until you know the high school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS HAS GPA 4.3 AND SAT 1430 WITH A FAIR AMOUNT OF GOOD ECS, APPLIED FOR CS, WHAT ARE THE CHANCES FOR ACCEPTANCE.
Depends on essays, course load rigor, and high school. The chance is certainly not zero as the PP said. We had lots of defers at our high school during the EA round. Many schools don't do class rank, but your son needs to be in the top 5%. A 4.3 at our high school is top 10%. We have a 6 point grading scale, so GPAs can be misleading.
According to the GPA/SAT comparison, OP's son likely doesn't have the course/school rigor such as those at TJ. So the chance is slim.