Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would tell my kid to apply only to early action schools that he's in the 75% or higher for all stats. 100% deferrals in that round (including from safeties) tanked months of his senior year and caused a lot of stress. For my next, if her sports recruitment doesn't work out, she'll apply to one realistic, first choice school ED and one or two real safeties either rolling or early action, then save the rest for regular decision.
As far as a year or two or out, at that point that's much that can be done as far class decisions. Your track--at least in my kids' private--is pretty much set and there's not much of a way to stray from it. My kids were locked out of most high-level courses because they weren't tracked that way from 4th grade on. I remember thinking parents who were obsessed with getting their kids into advanced classes in 4th grade were nuts. It turns out they were right.
Lastly, grades grades grades. That's what matters most. Test scores will be important again, too. But GPA, in as high level courses as possible, is what counts most. ECs are nice, but it is all about the GPA.
Can you elaborate on this? How did the private school track kids from 4th grade on?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What would you do differently? What advice would you give to yourself one or two years earlier? Would you have your DC take different courses? Would you and DC apply to different schools? What did you wish you knew as a parent of a sophomore/junior? Thanks in advance!
The college game has become the college lottery for T20 schools. I would counsel my HS student to take the classes and do the activities he/she is genuinely interested in. Let the chips fall where they may. Life's too short to spend four years of your life taking classes you're not interested in to look better for schools that you don't have a realistic chance of getting into.
Anonymous wrote:More safeties & fewer reaches/ matches on application list
Anonymous wrote:I would tell my kid to apply only to early action schools that he's in the 75% or higher for all stats. 100% deferrals in that round (including from safeties) tanked months of his senior year and caused a lot of stress. For my next, if her sports recruitment doesn't work out, she'll apply to one realistic, first choice school ED and one or two real safeties either rolling or early action, then save the rest for regular decision.
As far as a year or two or out, at that point that's much that can be done as far class decisions. Your track--at least in my kids' private--is pretty much set and there's not much of a way to stray from it. My kids were locked out of most high-level courses because they weren't tracked that way from 4th grade on. I remember thinking parents who were obsessed with getting their kids into advanced classes in 4th grade were nuts. It turns out they were right.
Lastly, grades grades grades. That's what matters most. Test scores will be important again, too. But GPA, in as high level courses as possible, is what counts most. ECs are nice, but it is all about the GPA.
Anonymous wrote:What would you do differently? What advice would you give to yourself one or two years earlier? Would you have your DC take different courses? Would you and DC apply to different schools? What did you wish you knew as a parent of a sophomore/junior? Thanks in advance!
Anonymous wrote:Love every school on the list. "Safety" means "lesser" to prestige hunters, so maybe cool it on that word.
Anonymous wrote:Consider colleges closer to home. Especially if your kid has ANY health issues. Also going abroad for college might be cheaper but could lead to living abroad as happened to my nephew. He’s very happy. His parents not so much.
Anonymous wrote:What would you do differently? What advice would you give to yourself one or two years earlier? Would you have your DC take different courses? Would you and DC apply to different schools? What did you wish you knew as a parent of a sophomore/junior? Thanks in advance!
Anonymous wrote:Fewer safeties.
More UK institutions.
Don't bother applying to UNC when no one from your school has gotten in in 15 years
Read each school's newspaper regularly and make sure language professors and study away aren't being cut (William & Mary and Dartmouth are two examples).
Check up on the overall financial health of schools.
Do all supplemental essays, even the identity essay.
Anonymous wrote:Consider colleges closer to home. Especially if your kid has ANY health issues. Also going abroad for college might be cheaper but could lead to living abroad as happened to my nephew. He’s very happy. His parents not so much.