Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:someone listed the gpa chart for harvard-westake? and the gp's were lower than most ivies and even schools like northwestern. it was a very revealing set of hard data published by the school, so no self reporting shenanigans
76% of the Chicago admits were in the top GPA tier (3.8 or above), which was slightly better than Cornell and slightly lower than Columbia.
Very revealing that they get smart kids, I guess.
Many private schools don't provide gpa. Chicago does not report gpa if the high schools don't report gpa. This loophole allows them to take many private school kids without disclosing their gpas. Someone mentioned HW gpas for Chicago being lower than many T20 schools, which is true.
No, you’re missing the point. The numbers I cited are the HW numbers.
76% of their admits were in the top GPA tier, better than Cornell and just behind Columbia. Is it true that it’s 100% for HYP? Sure. But that’s not particularly meaningful. At any of these schools you are surrounded by top kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I cannot imagine getting on a SF area website and saying “at our Washington DC private . . .”
Who the F cares?
DP, but there’s nothing similar to DCUM for any other metro, hence why people in other metros are here. Get over yourself.
This is a thread about a specific day school in Washington DC.
Anonymous wrote:And is it just me or is seeking this much info from your nephew weird? I couldn’t care less what stats are needed to get into Chicago at my nephew’s school. Odd.
Anonymous wrote:Someone explain this to me
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My nephew goes to Lawrenceville School and UChicago will take anyone from the 2nd-4th deciles of the class if they apply ED 1.
I'm not sure why people are being defensive about this reality. UChicago loves elite private school kids that aren't necessarily "top students" and would be overlooked by Ivies.
My DD is currently a junior at Lville and this is absolute fiction.
Anonymous wrote:My nephew goes to Lawrenceville School and UChicago will take anyone from the 2nd-4th deciles of the class if they apply ED 1.
I'm not sure why people are being defensive about this reality. UChicago loves elite private school kids that aren't necessarily "top students" and would be overlooked by Ivies.
Anonymous wrote:My nephew goes to Lawrenceville School and UChicago will take anyone from the 2nd-4th deciles of the class if they apply ED 1.
I'm not sure why people are being defensive about this reality. UChicago loves elite private school kids that aren't necessarily "top students" and would be overlooked by Ivies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I cannot imagine getting on a SF area website and saying “at our Washington DC private . . .”
Who the F cares?
DP, but there’s nothing similar to DCUM for any other metro, hence why people in other metros are here. Get over yourself.
Anonymous wrote:I cannot imagine getting on a SF area website and saying “at our Washington DC private . . .”
Who the F cares?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:someone listed the gpa chart for harvard-westake? and the gp's were lower than most ivies and even schools like northwestern. it was a very revealing set of hard data published by the school, so no self reporting shenanigans
76% of the Chicago admits were in the top GPA tier (3.8 or above), which was slightly better than Cornell and slightly lower than Columbia.
Very revealing that they get smart kids, I guess.
Many private schools don't provide gpa. Chicago does not report gpa if the high schools don't report gpa. This loophole allows them to take many private school kids without disclosing their gpas. Someone mentioned HW gpas for Chicago being lower than many T20 schools, which is true.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:someone listed the gpa chart for harvard-westake? and the gp's were lower than most ivies and even schools like northwestern. it was a very revealing set of hard data published by the school, so no self reporting shenanigans
76% of the Chicago admits were in the top GPA tier (3.8 or above), which was slightly better than Cornell and slightly lower than Columbia.
Very revealing that they get smart kids, I guess.