Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think 10 is a good number to apply to, and most important is to make sure your DC would be happy attending ANY of the schools, especially safeties.
Op here.
The list he put together is HYPSM,Caltech,Georgetown, Berkeley,UVA,CMU,UMCP,TA&M.
He really likes MIT,Caltech,Yale but it looks very difficult to get in...
Unless he has an unweighted 3.9-4.0 and 1500+ On the SAT, this list is way too heavy on the elite schools. The first several you listed are essentially a lottery for top students.
+1
That is a bizarre and nonsensical list.
Really?
Why?
Which one(s) of those do you consider a safety school?
Berkeley,UVA,CMU,UMCP,TA&M
Stats
SAT 1480, ACT 34, GPA 4.00 and 4.6 w, NHS,honors and 6 APs
UMCP and Texas yes. I wouldn't consider the other three "safeties".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Paying cash for UVA when our DS qualified for Univ. of Alabama's 100% full ride out-of-state scholarship.
Unless something is going wrong, that’s not a mistake (if UVA is in state). Alabama’s ranking is awful.
But your kid can watch football in a really nice stadium...
It actually isn't that nice of a stadium.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Caring so much, obsessing about this for five plus years. Our oldest are at "elite" colleges and doing really well. But the honest truth is they'd be doing just as well at any selective school.
Also, once they're at college the clock resets for top internships and professional school. The state U engineering kid who gets the $120,000 offer from Apple and podunk private college kid who gets into a good medical school are more impressive than the Ivy grad making $35,000 on the Hill or $55,000 as a consultant.
Yes, it’s always better to be top dog, at, say Kansas State or Florida Atlantic than it is to be be another generic graduate of an “elite” place.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Paying cash for UVA when our DS qualified for Univ. of Alabama's 100% full ride out-of-state scholarship.
Unless something is going wrong, that’s not a mistake (if UVA is in state). Alabama’s ranking is awful.
Mouth your kid can watch football in a really nice stadium...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Paying cash for UVA when our DS qualified for Univ. of Alabama's 100% full ride out-of-state scholarship.
Unless something is going wrong, that’s not a mistake (if UVA is in state). Alabama’s ranking is awful.
Mouth your kid can watch football in a really nice stadium...