Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Learn that your kid isn’t special and that’s okay. Your kid, your family, etc. isn’t destined for greatness because they worked hard during high school."
Somehow, I don't think this should be the takeaway from school rejection.
+1. How about learn these schools are not as special as you think they are.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This forum, r/ApplyingToCollege, CollegeConfidential, etc. is getting borderline depressing now. I understand it from the kids’ perspective, but to see parents falling over themselves because their kid got rejected from a school with an 8% acceptance rate is sad. Supposedly well-adjusted people “crashing out” over rejections from notoriously selective schools.
Learn that your kid isn’t special and that’s okay. Your kid, your family, etc. isn’t destined for greatness because they worked hard during high school. So did a majority of their classmates. You or your kid doesn’t deserve an elite school. You’re just another upper middle class family who is status obsessed who has nothing substantial to offer the world. American dream, whatever it was, never existed or just wasn’t accessible to you. Learn to grow up and teach your kids about life and reality.
When you sit down and watch this clamoring for four years of a person’s life, you realize how utterly stupid this all is. But no one wants to hear this because they think their kid is some savant for getting above a 1500 SAT. Give me a break.
Sorry your kid didn't get in
I’m at a top school. That’s why it’s even more sad. These schools aren’t that amazing.
Wake doesn't count![]()
Don’t know why you’re riding hard for these institutions. You’re not a great person because your kid is at a T10. You’re exactly who I’m talking about and it’s sad as a grown adult you’re acting this way. Hope you get therapy instead of having your college rank tied to your self esteem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This forum, r/ApplyingToCollege, CollegeConfidential, etc. is getting borderline depressing now. I understand it from the kids’ perspective, but to see parents falling over themselves because their kid got rejected from a school with an 8% acceptance rate is sad. Supposedly well-adjusted people “crashing out” over rejections from notoriously selective schools.
Learn that your kid isn’t special and that’s okay. Your kid, your family, etc. isn’t destined for greatness because they worked hard during high school. So did a majority of their classmates. You or your kid doesn’t deserve an elite school. You’re just another upper middle class family who is status obsessed who has nothing substantial to offer the world. American dream, whatever it was, never existed or just wasn’t accessible to you. Learn to grow up and teach your kids about life and reality.
When you sit down and watch this clamoring for four years of a person’s life, you realize how utterly stupid this all is. But no one wants to hear this because they think their kid is some savant for getting above a 1500 SAT. Give me a break.
Sorry your kid didn't get in
I’m at a top school. That’s why it’s even more sad. These schools aren’t that amazing.
Wake doesn't count![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This forum, r/ApplyingToCollege, CollegeConfidential, etc. is getting borderline depressing now. I understand it from the kids’ perspective, but to see parents falling over themselves because their kid got rejected from a school with an 8% acceptance rate is sad. Supposedly well-adjusted people “crashing out” over rejections from notoriously selective schools.
Learn that your kid isn’t special and that’s okay. Your kid, your family, etc. isn’t destined for greatness because they worked hard during high school. So did a majority of their classmates. You or your kid doesn’t deserve an elite school. You’re just another upper middle class family who is status obsessed who has nothing substantial to offer the world. American dream, whatever it was, never existed or just wasn’t accessible to you. Learn to grow up and teach your kids about life and reality.
When you sit down and watch this clamoring for four years of a person’s life, you realize how utterly stupid this all is. But no one wants to hear this because they think their kid is some savant for getting above a 1500 SAT. Give me a break.
Sorry your kid didn't get in
I’m at a top school. That’s why it’s even more sad. These schools aren’t that amazing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This forum, r/ApplyingToCollege, CollegeConfidential, etc. is getting borderline depressing now. I understand it from the kids’ perspective, but to see parents falling over themselves because their kid got rejected from a school with an 8% acceptance rate is sad. Supposedly well-adjusted people “crashing out” over rejections from notoriously selective schools.
Learn that your kid isn’t special and that’s okay. Your kid, your family, etc. isn’t destined for greatness because they worked hard during high school. So did a majority of their classmates. You or your kid doesn’t deserve an elite school. You’re just another upper middle class family who is status obsessed who has nothing substantial to offer the world. American dream, whatever it was, never existed or just wasn’t accessible to you. Learn to grow up and teach your kids about life and reality.
When you sit down and watch this clamoring for four years of a person’s life, you realize how utterly stupid this all is. But no one wants to hear this because they think their kid is some savant for getting above a 1500 SAT. Give me a break.
Sorry your kid didn't get in
Anonymous wrote:Totally agree but its just another example of an upper middle class arms race. Everyone is so afraid of keeping up with their neighbors and feeling inferior - its really sad. We learned this early with sports and its carried over to education in spades.
Anonymous wrote:This forum, r/ApplyingToCollege, CollegeConfidential, etc. is getting borderline depressing now. I understand it from the kids’ perspective, but to see parents falling over themselves because their kid got rejected from a school with an 8% acceptance rate is sad. Supposedly well-adjusted people “crashing out” over rejections from notoriously selective schools.
Learn that your kid isn’t special and that’s okay. Your kid, your family, etc. isn’t destined for greatness because they worked hard during high school. So did a majority of their classmates. You or your kid doesn’t deserve an elite school. You’re just another upper middle class family who is status obsessed who has nothing substantial to offer the world. American dream, whatever it was, never existed or just wasn’t accessible to you. Learn to grow up and teach your kids about life and reality.
When you sit down and watch this clamoring for four years of a person’s life, you realize how utterly stupid this all is. But no one wants to hear this because they think their kid is some savant for getting above a 1500 SAT. Give me a break.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Learn that your kid isn’t special and that’s okay. Your kid, your family, etc. isn’t destined for greatness because they worked hard during high school."
Somehow, I don't think this should be the takeaway from school rejection.
+1. How about learn these schools are not as special as you think they are.
Anonymous wrote:"Learn that your kid isn’t special and that’s okay. Your kid, your family, etc. isn’t destined for greatness because they worked hard during high school."
Somehow, I don't think this should be the takeaway from school rejection.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OK B o o m e r.
Ummm you don't have to be a Boomer to think like that. You literally just have to be smart enough, reasonable enough to understand what a single digit acceptance rate means.
Find the 4-5 Top schools that interest you/are a good fit for you all around, apply and hope, but at same time create an excellent list of Target and Safeties that your kid also Loves and would really want to attend. Focus your enegery on those, because that is most likely where they will be attending.
To improve your enjoyment/happiness, make sure 1-2 of the targets are where your kid is at/above 75% and the acceptance rate is also 30%+.
Anonymous wrote:You should convey to kids well before they apply that with so many amazing people who are smart and great at different things, there really is no notion of desert in elite college admissions.
It is also what parents often fail to grasp. Your child doesn't "deserve it" (neither does mine).
Anonymous wrote:You should convey to kids well before they apply that with so many amazing people who are smart and great at different things, there really is no notion of desert in elite college admissions.
It is also what parents often fail to grasp. Your child doesn't "deserve it" (neither does mine).