Yes, I know the specifics. I am not sharing my client's specifics here.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Almost all private colleges do audits and spot checks of a random sample of students.
Not sure about public universities.
Yes, my kid's T10 definitely does this. I saw a reddit post by a kid that was audited and was having trouble verifying club participation.
+1 For every parent that is concerned about where their frenemy's kid is attending, there are probably at least a few people being checked up upon by the school. It is a thing.
They have 5 min to read the app, when are they verifying/checking? I know an AO at a T10, this is not a thing there. They use the LOR to provide support/verification….
AO's are not doing any checking. This is a separate process where a random set of students are picked and then a sample subset of the activities on each of the students are verified. Yes, it is a small sample but there are checks in place.
One of my colleague's from a while back had done work on this and he used to share some really funny stories.
I am a college counselor. A highly selective absolutely verified one of my student's achievements this year during their review process. Possibly unrelated (or possibly related in that they only take the time to verify for some students?), but this student was admitted.
How exactly was this done? You’re saying an AO reached out to you in an unsolicited manner, to verify a student’s statements.
No, I am an independent counselor so the university did not call me. I can't give details but my student (the applicant) told me how they learned that the university had fact checked an important achievement within their application.
How- checked how? Seems like as an independent counselor you’d get the specifics.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Almost all private colleges do audits and spot checks of a random sample of students.
Not sure about public universities.
Yes, my kid's T10 definitely does this. I saw a reddit post by a kid that was audited and was having trouble verifying club participation.
+1 For every parent that is concerned about where their frenemy's kid is attending, there are probably at least a few people being checked up upon by the school. It is a thing.
They have 5 min to read the app, when are they verifying/checking? I know an AO at a T10, this is not a thing there. They use the LOR to provide support/verification….
AO's are not doing any checking. This is a separate process where a random set of students are picked and then a sample subset of the activities on each of the students are verified. Yes, it is a small sample but there are checks in place.
One of my colleague's from a while back had done work on this and he used to share some really funny stories.
I am a college counselor. A highly selective absolutely verified one of my student's achievements this year during their review process. Possibly unrelated (or possibly related in that they only take the time to verify for some students?), but this student was admitted.
How exactly was this done? You’re saying an AO reached out to you in an unsolicited manner, to verify a student’s statements.
No, I am an independent counselor so the university did not call me. I can't give details but my student (the applicant) told me how they learned that the university had fact checked an important achievement within their application.
How- checked how? Seems like as an independent counselor you’d get the specifics.
In the spirit of this statement, and as part of our ongoing effort to deter application fraud, the Office of College Admission verifies a small number of credentials each year for a randomly selected sample of admitted students who have chosen to matriculate at Brown. The verification process is straightforward, with school counselors being asked to confirm a few selected factors as reported on the application for each student included in the sample group. Requests are sent to counselors in May with a response deadline no later than July 1.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Almost all private colleges do audits and spot checks of a random sample of students.
Not sure about public universities.
Yes, my kid's T10 definitely does this. I saw a reddit post by a kid that was audited and was having trouble verifying club participation.
+1 For every parent that is concerned about where their frenemy's kid is attending, there are probably at least a few people being checked up upon by the school. It is a thing.
They have 5 min to read the app, when are they verifying/checking? I know an AO at a T10, this is not a thing there. They use the LOR to provide support/verification….
AO's are not doing any checking. This is a separate process where a random set of students are picked and then a sample subset of the activities on each of the students are verified. Yes, it is a small sample but there are checks in place.
One of my colleague's from a while back had done work on this and he used to share some really funny stories.
I am a college counselor. A highly selective absolutely verified one of my student's achievements this year during their review process. Possibly unrelated (or possibly related in that they only take the time to verify for some students?), but this student was admitted.
How exactly was this done? You’re saying an AO reached out to you in an unsolicited manner, to verify a student’s statements.
No, I am an independent counselor so the university did not call me. I can't give details but my student (the applicant) told me how they learned that the university had fact checked an important achievement within their application.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Almost all private colleges do audits and spot checks of a random sample of students.
Not sure about public universities.
Yes, my kid's T10 definitely does this. I saw a reddit post by a kid that was audited and was having trouble verifying club participation.
+1 For every parent that is concerned about where their frenemy's kid is attending, there are probably at least a few people being checked up upon by the school. It is a thing.
They have 5 min to read the app, when are they verifying/checking? I know an AO at a T10, this is not a thing there. They use the LOR to provide support/verification….
AO's are not doing any checking. This is a separate process where a random set of students are picked and then a sample subset of the activities on each of the students are verified. Yes, it is a small sample but there are checks in place.
One of my colleague's from a while back had done work on this and he used to share some really funny stories.
I am a college counselor. A highly selective absolutely verified one of my student's achievements this year during their review process. Possibly unrelated (or possibly related in that they only take the time to verify for some students?), but this student was admitted.
How exactly was this done? You’re saying an AO reached out to you in an unsolicited manner, to verify a student’s statements.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Almost all private colleges do audits and spot checks of a random sample of students.
Not sure about public universities.
Yes, my kid's T10 definitely does this. I saw a reddit post by a kid that was audited and was having trouble verifying club participation.
+1 For every parent that is concerned about where their frenemy's kid is attending, there are probably at least a few people being checked up upon by the school. It is a thing.
They have 5 min to read the app, when are they verifying/checking? I know an AO at a T10, this is not a thing there. They use the LOR to provide support/verification….
AO's are not doing any checking. This is a separate process where a random set of students are picked and then a sample subset of the activities on each of the students are verified. Yes, it is a small sample but there are checks in place.
One of my colleague's from a while back had done work on this and he used to share some really funny stories.
I am a college counselor. A highly selective absolutely verified one of my student's achievements this year during their review process. Possibly unrelated (or possibly related in that they only take the time to verify for some students?), but this student was admitted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Almost all private colleges do audits and spot checks of a random sample of students.
Not sure about public universities.
Yes, my kid's T10 definitely does this. I saw a reddit post by a kid that was audited and was having trouble verifying club participation.
+1 For every parent that is concerned about where their frenemy's kid is attending, there are probably at least a few people being checked up upon by the school. It is a thing.
They have 5 min to read the app, when are they verifying/checking? I know an AO at a T10, this is not a thing there. They use the LOR to provide support/verification….
AO's are not doing any checking. This is a separate process where a random set of students are picked and then a sample subset of the activities on each of the students are verified. Yes, it is a small sample but there are checks in place.
One of my colleague's from a while back had done work on this and he used to share some really funny stories.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Almost all private colleges do audits and spot checks of a random sample of students.
Not sure about public universities.
Yes, my kid's T10 definitely does this. I saw a reddit post by a kid that was audited and was having trouble verifying club participation.
+1 For every parent that is concerned about where their frenemy's kid is attending, there are probably at least a few people being checked up upon by the school. It is a thing.
They have 5 min to read the app, when are they verifying/checking? I know an AO at a T10, this is not a thing there. They use the LOR to provide support/verification….
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No way my kid is going to have 10 activities. Very few at school beyond the sport they play and one school club. He has one regular service commitment and a regular teenager type summer job. Can you list hobbies or does this just make you look self-centered? Do all your activities have to be for a greater good or to make an impact in your community? Outside of schoolwork, my son spends his free time at the river fishing or playing golf for hours on the weekend. Do colleges want to know about time consuming hobbies like that? He isn’t playing video games, but he certainly isn’t changing the world either. Honestly, I sort of get the temptation to exaggerate activities because colleges don’t seem to want a kid like mine.
What type of schools does he want to apply to? Prob not necessary for anything other than selective/competitive schools (T75??) Is your kid interested in Enviro Science or Ecology or anything like that?
For advice on EC language, take a look at how this guy describes his ECs from the link below:
ECs:
Ultimate Frisbee fanatic, played all 4 years for my high school and played for my state's YCC team in 2022, at which we placed 6th. They don't really do JV/Varsity but I am on the travel team.
JV cross country runner
Captain of the alpine ski team, scored in the upper quarter in Slalom at state in 2022.
Lots and lots of volunteerism at local arboretum, volunteer about 30 hours a month doing restoration projects.
Jazz Band president, bass player. (I also play the accordion and I put that down as part of the band EC in case colleges are looking for the quirky factor lmaoo)
Math Circle member at local university, guided discussions from professors about advanced math like topology and abstract algebra.
Created a huge tabletop-RPG style geopolitical simulator game over quarantine to play online with my friends. I know this is kinda silly but it was a massive time commitment so i wanna put it down.
Designed and built 2 meter aperture radio telescope to read emissions from the hydrogen line in the milky way. Not doing research or anything, just wanted to do a passion project while the world was frozen from COVID.
Was a volunteer instructor for 5 outdoor camps over the summers, taught kids whitewater kayaking skills, how to fish, and be good stewards of nature.
Paid lifeguarding job for 1 summer after sophomore year.
https://www.reddit.com/r/chanceme/comments/zpwoqa/chance_me_swarthmore_wesleyan_colgate_carleton/
Anonymous wrote:Varsity team member and varsity captain aren’t going to be distinguishing for AOs.
On so many of my kids Club and HS teams they don’t have a strict captain—a different kid wears the armband does the coin toss based on performance and character traits throughout the season. So pretty much 75% of team could say “co-captain”.
Is it really that different from saying you were Valedictorian when there were 200 other Valedictorians in your public HS class of 600 students.![]()