Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FGLI is not difficult to figure out. Parent education is straight up asked in the app. Income level is estimated, possibly by algorithm, from census tract via the College Landscape tool used by most colleges, as well as parent occupation.
Is parent occupation part of the college app?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Zip code is pretty meaningless in urban areas.
They use census tract via the College Board Landscape Tool for the applicant.
Anonymous wrote:Zip code is pretty meaningless in urban areas.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are a number of organizations working with colleges including QuestBridge, A Better Chance, College Match, EducationUSA, Gear Up, Lenfest Scholars Foundation, Matriculate, Open Dreams, Our Moon Education, TeenSharp, etc. Your DC should look them up and work with these organizations.
You somehow missed the most important ones (other than Questbridge).
Thrive and LEDA feed a significant portion of the first gen low income students into these top colleges. Look at the the thrive scholars decisions page: https://www.instagram.com/thrivedecisions29?igsh=ZTZ6OXU1M2JxOXdp and there’s also this https://www.instagram.com/thrivedecisions2028?igsh=MWE2NWdxNnYwbGEzcQ==" target="_new" rel="nofollow"> https://www.instagram.com/thrivedecisions2028?igsh=MWE2NWdxNnYwbGEzcQ==. These organizations vet majority Asian/Black/Hispanic students at good high schools or with outstanding academic records and spend millions in resources with corporate sponsors to get them ready for top colleges and eventually top industries.
+1, fgli admissions is based around Thrive, LEDA, CollegeMatchLA, and then Questbridge
This is the answer. 40% of Thrive Scholars go to Ivies, and an even higher percentage of LEDA scholars go to Ivies. These programs have hundreds of millions of dollars funneled by corporate sponsors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are outside scholarships for kids of various races and they vet candidates, often by in-person interview.
OP I dont think these scholarships would be gained by this fall. but I could be wrong.
I'm working with some students now who dont want to write about this in their essay and, ugh, I think it's a missed opportunity bcs I dont know how else they signal what is a priority for some colleges still.
No, private scholarships can give their money to anyone they want. We haven't reached that level of fascism yet.
Many of these are directed at specific race groups (Native American being one) and/or FGLI.
They carry weight because the candidates are generally vetted to be who they say they are.
Illegal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are outside scholarships for kids of various races and they vet candidates, often by in-person interview.
OP I dont think these scholarships would be gained by this fall. but I could be wrong.
I'm working with some students now who dont want to write about this in their essay and, ugh, I think it's a missed opportunity bcs I dont know how else they signal what is a priority for some colleges still.
No, private scholarships can give their money to anyone they want. We haven't reached that level of fascism yet.
Many of these are directed at specific race groups (Native American being one) and/or FGLI.
They carry weight because the candidates are generally vetted to be who they say they are.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do AO see your zip code? Could be from demographic info there or from your high school?
How in the world would this be helpful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Colleges are businesses that use algorithms as part of the admissions process. An annual plan is developed at the top and AOs meet the goals they are given. Universities have access to sufficient demographic data to identify characteristics of applicants even if they don’t self-identify.
While the degree to which universities will continue to seek diversity will depend on university leadership and its financial posture. Next year will be better for full pay than those with financial need at most schools.
I live in nyc and even in our apartment building the wealth varies from 50k to 500k+. Our block is even more extreme
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FGLI is not difficult to figure out. Parent education is straight up asked in the app. Income level is estimated, possibly by algorithm, from census tract via the College Landscape tool used by most colleges, as well as parent occupation.
Is parent occupation part of the college app?
not required
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FGLI is not difficult to figure out. Parent education is straight up asked in the app. Income level is estimated, possibly by algorithm, from census tract via the College Landscape tool used by most colleges, as well as parent occupation.
Is parent occupation part of the college app?
not required
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are a number of organizations working with colleges including QuestBridge, A Better Chance, College Match, EducationUSA, Gear Up, Lenfest Scholars Foundation, Matriculate, Open Dreams, Our Moon Education, TeenSharp, etc. Your DC should look them up and work with these organizations.
You somehow missed the most important ones (other than Questbridge).
Thrive and LEDA feed a significant portion of the first gen low income students into these top colleges. Look at the the thrive scholars decisions page: https://www.instagram.com/thrivedecisions29?igsh=ZTZ6OXU1M2JxOXdp and there’s also this https://www.instagram.com/thrivedecisions2028?igsh=MWE2NWdxNnYwbGEzcQ==" target="_new" rel="nofollow"> https://www.instagram.com/thrivedecisions2028?igsh=MWE2NWdxNnYwbGEzcQ==. These organizations vet majority Asian/Black/Hispanic students at good high schools or with outstanding academic records and spend millions in resources with corporate sponsors to get them ready for top colleges and eventually top industries.
+1, fgli admissions is based around Thrive, LEDA, CollegeMatchLA, and then Questbridge
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FGLI is not difficult to figure out. Parent education is straight up asked in the app. Income level is estimated, possibly by algorithm, from census tract via the College Landscape tool used by most colleges, as well as parent occupation.
Is parent occupation part of the college app?