Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In my experience, Sidwell does a good job of placing legacies and athletes. The top students who do not fit into either of those categories find it challenging to get into Ivies.
1. Top students in GENERAL find it challenging to get into Ivies.
2. Let's say Sidwell has 12 - 15% of the class who are National Merit Semifinalists; so, 13 - 18 kids depending on the year. Harvard or Yale isn't taking all 15 kids. And their transcripts won't all be identical -- there will be more of a range than people might think. And the recommendations from teachers won't all be the same. And some of those 15 will have a hook -- athlete, legacy, or underrepresented minority.
This is the college world today. Drew Gilpin Faust could take the job of college counselor in her retirement and Harvard still won't take 15 kids from Sidwell. They are trying to build a national and international class and geography in this area is a limiting factor
Sidwell only had 6 national merit semi-finalists this year - the lowest number in my memory. With early decision and early admission (single choice) the 12-15 kids in your example have probably spread out their choices among the top schools. For the RD rounds, that's when you are likely to see the top 15% of the class possibly all trying for the same handful of schools. You are correct that there are only so many kids that they will take from an individual school. My DC is a senior at Sidwell and waiting for next week to see if the early choice works out. No legacy and not a recruitable athlete, but very competitive none-the-less. It's going to be a loooong week!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In my experience, Sidwell does a good job of placing legacies and athletes. The top students who do not fit into either of those categories find it challenging to get into Ivies.
1. Top students in GENERAL find it challenging to get into Ivies.
2. Let's say Sidwell has 12 - 15% of the class who are National Merit Semifinalists; so, 13 - 18 kids depending on the year. Harvard or Yale isn't taking all 15 kids. And their transcripts won't all be identical -- there will be more of a range than people might think. And the recommendations from teachers won't all be the same. And some of those 15 will have a hook -- athlete, legacy, or underrepresented minority.
This is the college world today. Drew Gilpin Faust could take the job of college counselor in her retirement and Harvard still won't take 15 kids from Sidwell. They are trying to build a national and international class and geography in this area is a limiting factor
Anonymous wrote:Wow. That's really scary to think that a student would be eliminated from consideration from a PSAT score. My DS missed the DC cutoff by one point! Our school tells kids not to obsess over the PSAT because the SAT is what matters, but maybe it makes more sense to prep for the PSAT if that's the test that will eliminate you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think people are too quick to use National Merit as a shorthand for smart kids. At our school, the NMSFs are not uniformly the smartest kids in the school and as a result don't all go to Ivies. Increasingly it is more about your high school record than the result of one test.
I think NMSF and SAT and grades are all good, but imperfect, indicators of which kids are smart. I suppose it's possible for some dumb kid to get lucky and guess correct on enough test questions to boost his score, or possible for some smart kid to get distracted and screw up her PSAT score. But those same errors can creep into school grades. We all know of examples where an average kid who was teacher's pet got an undeservedly high grade, or where a class rebel got unfairly low grades from teachers. No measure is perfect. And thinking back to my own high school experience, it generally was the smartest kids who scored best on the standardized tests. Some were slackers with middling grades, but they were the people we all considered the brightest. Not saying those tests are perfect by any means, but they're pretty effective.
Your general point may be right, but within the tight band that the PP is talking about (10 or 150 points on a PSAT or 100 to 150 point equivalent on an SAT) a single test taken on any given Saturday is not a good measure of who is "smartest".
Anonymous wrote:I think people are too quick to use National Merit as a shorthand for smart kids. At our school, the NMSFs are not uniformly the smartest kids in the school and as a result don't all go to Ivies. Increasingly it is more about your high school record than the result of one test.
Anonymous wrote:My child was at a big 3 and was told "no ivy" was a possibility, despite 3 800s and a grade point average of over 3.9. She was a HYP legacy as well!! They said because she wasn't an athlete, even though she had been captain of a team she formed herself and did outside of school. I was pretty outraged but just kept on with it. The counselor objected when she signed up for 5 Ap tests junior year. When she got all 5s, the counselor was more interested. She had many other activities and an extra language as well. I came up with some special programs that some of the ivies had that she would be great in and the counselor became more interested. Sometimes I think its a matter of helping the counselor market your child. In your case, being Latino will help hugely and I think you should be very nice to the counselor and keep asking, nicely, for what you want. Why does your child want to go to those specific schools? Give the counselor a few reasons. Look at the professors- have your child read some of their books. And when your child gets in, they will remember your persistence always!! And do not worry about your child fitting in- those universities are huge and there is no in crowd- just many many groups and your child will belong to several I am sure. And yes, my child did get where she wanted to go. The counselor was a big supporter in the end. My child was quiet as well. One thing the counselor said was " Columbia told me not to send any quiet students there" !! Insane!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think people are too quick to use National Merit as a shorthand for smart kids. At our school, the NMSFs are not uniformly the smartest kids in the school and as a result don't all go to Ivies. Increasingly it is more about your high school record than the result of one test.
I think NMSF and SAT and grades are all good, but imperfect, indicators of which kids are smart. I suppose it's possible for some dumb kid to get lucky and guess correct on enough test questions to boost his score, or possible for some smart kid to get distracted and screw up her PSAT score. But those same errors can creep into school grades. We all know of examples where an average kid who was teacher's pet got an undeservedly high grade, or where a class rebel got unfairly low grades from teachers. No measure is perfect. And thinking back to my own high school experience, it generally was the smartest kids who scored best on the standardized tests. Some were slackers with middling grades, but they were the people we all considered the brightest. Not saying those tests are perfect by any means, but they're pretty effective.
Anonymous wrote:I think people are too quick to use National Merit as a shorthand for smart kids. At our school, the NMSFs are not uniformly the smartest kids in the school and as a result don't all go to Ivies. Increasingly it is more about your high school record than the result of one test.