Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am almost done with the book. Who knew that one can sell a book based on common sense and anecdotes dressed up as representative data? The author’s kids attend the same school as mine. Let’s see if they go to one of his “dream schools”.
I am a brown immigrant. I read his first book and was vastly underwhelmed. But, evidently people do need these common sense musings.
Is there anything in the book about being brown or an immigrant?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am almost done with the book. Who knew that one can sell a book based on common sense and anecdotes dressed up as representative data? The author’s kids attend the same school as mine. Let’s see if they go to one of his “dream schools”.
I am a brown immigrant. I read his first book and was vastly underwhelmed. But, evidently people do need these common sense musings.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am almost done with the book. Who knew that one can sell a book based on common sense and anecdotes dressed up as representative data? The author’s kids attend the same school as mine. Let’s see if they go to one of his “dream schools”.
I’m so curious. What school does his kids attend?
Sorry, I don’t feel comfortable sharing this info.
So willing to take anonymous shots and drag minors into it but not willing to back it up? That tells me a lot about you and the school you chose for your kids.
I am really not sure why wondering whether Selingo’s kids will go to one of the schools for which he is advocating is “dragging minors into it”. By the way, he mentions his kids in the book on numerous occasions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am almost done with the book. Who knew that one can sell a book based on common sense and anecdotes dressed up as representative data? The author’s kids attend the same school as mine. Let’s see if they go to one of his “dream schools”.
I’m so curious. What school does his kids attend?
Sorry, I don’t feel comfortable sharing this info.
So willing to take anonymous shots and drag minors into it but not willing to back it up? That tells me a lot about you and the school you chose for your kids.
I am really not sure why wondering whether Selingo’s kids will go to one of the schools for which he is advocating is “dragging minors into it”. By the way, he mentions his kids in the book on numerous occasions.
Anonymous wrote:I am almost done with the book. Who knew that one can sell a book based on common sense and anecdotes dressed up as representative data? The author’s kids attend the same school as mine. Let’s see if they go to one of his “dream schools”.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am almost done with the book. Who knew that one can sell a book based on common sense and anecdotes dressed up as representative data? The author’s kids attend the same school as mine. Let’s see if they go to one of his “dream schools”.
I’m so curious. What school does his kids attend?
Sorry, I don’t feel comfortable sharing this info.
So willing to take anonymous shots and drag minors into it but not willing to back it up? That tells me a lot about you and the school you chose for your kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just read the list. Completely random. Save your money. Don't buy.
you can read the book for free at the library. on kindle, it only cost me $15. I just finished it and definitely got more than $15 worth of advice and insight. the list is just in the appendix and it includes a longer commentary on each selected school. but the book is really not about the dream school list alone.
+100.
What's sending me about this thread is all the people commenting on just the list who have not read the actual book. I guess this is what I should have expected because this crowd is not known for context or nuance. I wish he had never included the list in the appendix - it distracts from the broader message. The real value is not in the list but in the insights and tools he provides to help families make informed decisions. People seem to be missing the forest for the trees here.
Agreed!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am almost done with the book. Who knew that one can sell a book based on common sense and anecdotes dressed up as representative data? The author’s kids attend the same school as mine. Let’s see if they go to one of his “dream schools”.
lol this sounds like another admissions author who is a college counselor at an exclusive and expensive private school. He says there is no need for private IECs, but his school (where he is the head of college counseking) makes sure that every student is helped to crazy lengths — says so on their website. Such a hypocrite!
Please let us know where his kids end up!