Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
OP here: I have read through all the posts (and my own, which are mangled by my poor late-night grammar), but I think this one really encapsulates how she feels, for better or for worse. If she had known that she was going to wind-up at a school of this level, she feels she would have weighted her priorities differently and enjoyed life a bit more. As it stands, she's put everything into schoolwork and extracurrculars, and hasn't exactly reaped the benefits of this hard work. For what it's worth, I'd be perfectly happy for her to go to William and Mary, especially compared to these SLACs I don't know much about. Also, her counselor did class these schools as safeties for her stats, and it seems this was accurate in regard to her results at these schools.
You DO realize that if she had "weighted her priorities differently" she probably wouldn't be into W&M Monroe Scholars? These schools just didn't decide not to accept your kid because hmm, i dunno they didn't like her name? They had a reason they felt was valid, full stop. Forget about what the counselor says, shouldn't have listened to them anyway. Our counselor told my daughter she wasn't going to have a chance at the school she ended up getting into. They are human and this is an unusual year. She obviously should have had a more realistic expectation of what her options were going be.
My son is 7 of his class of over 400+, 4.6 GPA and rising, varsity athlete, strong ECs, wrote great essays... he didn't shoot for Ivy Leagues or even top 20 schools, though he could have. He was REALISTIC and wanted to go somewhere that was a match. He applied ED and got in. I asked him after he got his decision if he regretted not shooting higher, and he looked at me and said, "um no? I'm psyched!" SO much of what the kid thinks comes from YOU, the parent. If they sense that YOU are disappointed in them, that is very bad. Your only job is to help set their expectations if they aim too high so you don't have a heartbroken kid on your hands.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Go to Grinnell!!
OP I hear what you are saying, but damn those are such good options. I can understand being disappointed with your choices, but there is a limit!
Reminds me of my brother who went into a severe depression over his Harvard rejection (this was years ago, but still). He just couldn't believe it. Got into other ives, but no....angry and b*tchy all summer! I was like, wow what a tool. He wound up at Duke and had a great experience.
Like I said, it's sad when you don't get what you want but this is a little beyond. It's not Arizona State (no offense to anyone but you know what I mean.) It's not even... idk BU or American. It's Grinnell and Skidmore and Monoroe Scholars for goodness sakes!
Can you explain what is wrong with BU?
Anonymous wrote:I thought that superior college counseling was one of the highlights of a top private school. How could the counselor tell OP's daughter that Grinnell is a safety school, especially in this environment? They had 10,400 applications this year -- the acceptance rate will likely end up being in the teens.
OP, did your daughter get a generous merit aid award from Grinnell? If she didn't, she's not near the top of the school's applicant pool. They are very generous with merit aid when they really want a student.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to a big three, a couple decades ago. I kind of understand what you mean about working so hard. I got up at 6:30 in the morning and frequently did not go to bed until 1 o’clock at night. I worked all the time. I did sports, orchestra, drama, choir. I did community service. I got good grades. I want up going to a top 15 small liberal arts college, but not Amherst or Yale etc. Ultimately the sleep deprivation and constant stress did not seem worth it. I could’ve just focused on my grades and done one or two extracurriculars I actually enjoyed and gone to a school that was almost as good as the one I went to. I got waitlisted at three Ivies but did not get off the waitlist. My take away was to not do very many extracurriculars in college.
OP here: I have read through all the posts (and my own, which are mangled by my poor late-night grammar), but I think this one really encapsulates how she feels, for better or for worse. If she had known that she was going to wind-up at a school of this level, she feels she would have weighted her priorities differently and enjoyed life a bit more. As it stands, she's put everything into schoolwork and extracurrculars, and hasn't exactly reaped the benefits of this hard work. For what it's worth, I'd be perfectly happy for her to go to William and Mary, especially compared to these SLACs I don't know much about. Also, her counselor did class these schools as safeties for her stats, and it seems this was accurate in regard to her results at these schools.
Jesus Christ.
And mother of Joseph! The more the OP writes, the worse they look. Yikes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP,
Please consider encouraging your DD not to go to W&M. My DC is a Monroe scholar too and has a number of excellent choices. I would be thrilled if they chose W&M with this honor (and this not about the cost--we have no problem paying for an Ivy) and would prefer they attended with students who have the right attitude.
-mom with two Ivy degrees (who perhaps knows better because I've attended one)
Is there a typo here? "not to go to W&M"?
No typo. I'm not going to tell my kid what to do but I'm really hoping they choose to go there as a Monroe scholar. And therefore not to have to hang out with ultra-privileged kids who are unhappy to be there, which I find eye-popping.[/quote
I agree, my kid is also a Monroe Scholar, they are going to choose another school because it is a better fit but they are honored and humbled to be accepted to W&M and especially as a MS. Our child understands the significance of the honor and yes, stats, test scores and EC's are far superior in a VA Governor's School to OP's DD.
Anonymous wrote:Does your child go to an all girls school O.P.?it is much harder for girls to get into top colleges without a hook. When they are at an all girls school, the college admissions people sort them by comparing with each other. Mine went to NCS/Holton + got into Ivy but other equally qualified unhooked kids ended up with choices much worse than your d.d. such as High Point U. that I had never heard of. My advicevto your d.d. is go to W+M-- do very well + go to Ivy for grad school. Other girls did that from d.d.'s school. Ignore the haters on this thread. Good luck to your d.d.
Anonymous wrote:Go to Grinnell!!
OP I hear what you are saying, but damn those are such good options. I can understand being disappointed with your choices, but there is a limit!
Reminds me of my brother who went into a severe depression over his Harvard rejection (this was years ago, but still). He just couldn't believe it. Got into other ives, but no....angry and b*tchy all summer! I was like, wow what a tool. He wound up at Duke and had a great experience.
Like I said, it's sad when you don't get what you want but this is a little beyond. It's not Arizona State (no offense to anyone but you know what I mean.) It's not even... idk BU or American. It's Grinnell and Skidmore and Monoroe Scholars for goodness sakes!