Anonymous wrote:OP, you want to know what gutted feels like? I was accepted to two top 25 schools coming out of a public high school from an UMC family. I hadn't received any grooming with zero SAT courses, tutors or advisors. I l sorted it all on my own, working my tail off and figuring out the logistics with no guidance or support. After receiving my acceptances, my father told me that he didn't believe in girls spending money on college because they "just end up staying home with kids anyways." He refused to spend even a cent on college for me. I had no idea prior to this point that he wouldn't support me attending college--he apparently had assumed that I wouldn't get it anywhere.
I moved out the morning after high school graduation, got a job and saved every penny. I attended a bottom third tier university that gave me massive merit aid, as I didn't qualify for need based aid based on my father's income. I worked three jobs most of college to afford to live.
I graduated top in my college class, won a Rhodes scholarship, got a PhD from Nobel Prize winner, and have a very successful career. I still don't speak to my father.
Your daughter has it easy. She should go to one of those tops schools and enjoy her privilege.
Anonymous wrote:OP, you want to know what gutted feels like? I was accepted to two top 25 schools coming out of a public high school from an UMC family. I hadn't received any grooming with zero SAT courses, tutors or advisors. I l sorted it all on my own, working my tail off and figuring out the logistics with no guidance or support. After receiving my acceptances, my father told me that he didn't believe in girls spending money on college because they "just end up staying home with kids anyways." He refused to spend even a cent on college for me. I had no idea prior to this point that he wouldn't support me attending college--he apparently had assumed that I wouldn't get it anywhere.
I moved out the morning after high school graduation, got a job and saved every penny. I attended a bottom third tier university that gave me massive merit aid, as I didn't qualify for need based aid based on my father's income. I worked three jobs most of college to afford to live.
I graduated top in my college class, won a Rhodes scholarship, got a PhD from Nobel Prize winner, and have a very successful career. I still don't speak to my father.
Your daughter has it easy. She should go to one of those tops schools and enjoy her privilege.
Anonymous wrote:Sorry, but the numbers just aren’t good enough for an Ivy. Be grateful for the Monroe Scholar thing. Sounds very lucky to have goteen that.
Anonymous wrote:Sorry, but the numbers just aren’t good enough for an Ivy. Be grateful for the Monroe Scholar thing. Sounds very lucky to have goteen that.
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.
Anonymous wrote:Disappointment here is rough. We all know (even DC) that they will get over it. But there is no excitement. DC was accepted to two foundational schools, deferred one; WL one target and reject two others; rejected two reaches.
He has excellent stats including 1500+ SAT. DC private. I’m a little worried the lesson he will learn is, “I worked my ass off when I could have been goofing off more, and I still only got in the same school as Larlo who has way worse grades and doesn’t try.”
Anonymous wrote:What does "foundational school" mean?
Anonymous wrote: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.
But they want them for a reason relevant to either special needs of the school (a flautist for orchest) or for reporting to the USN&WR to climb those ranks. Those items can be URM, hooked in other ways, legacy, extraordinary high GPA, perfect SATs or ACTs, first-generation, low-income Pell grant (doesn't sound applicable); yield if OP's DD made it clear she would attend if accepted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Disappointment here is rough. We all know (even DC) that they will get over it. But there is no excitement. DC was accepted to two foundational schools, deferred one; WL one target and reject two others; rejected two reaches.
He has excellent stats including 1500+ SAT. DC private. I’m a little worried the lesson he will learn is, “I worked my ass off when I could have been goofing off more, and I still only got in the same school as Larlo who has way worse grades and doesn’t try.”
I guess the next step would be if they are really that exceptional than they should be able to dominate at University of Disgruntled Children and get into an amazing grad school right?
Anonymous wrote:Disappointment here is rough. We all know (even DC) that they will get over it. But there is no excitement. DC was accepted to two foundational schools, deferred one; WL one target and reject two others; rejected two reaches.
He has excellent stats including 1500+ SAT. DC private. I’m a little worried the lesson he will learn is, “I worked my ass off when I could have been goofing off more, and I still only got in the same school as Larlo who has way worse grades and doesn’t try.”