Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does it matter though?
I mean, Feds have their job and pay grade and amount online as public info...
Who cares!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The access to SCOIR or Naviance should be banned from parents and students. Thye should have no right to know other students' stats, identifiable or not. At our school, there are some tiger parents complaining about UMR got into this or that with a lower stats. College admissions is never only about stats!
Are you a private school parent? How on Earth would this data be helpful to public school parents without direct access? We have one meeting in four years with the counselor.
Usually it’s not much of a problem at public schools. They have thousands applied to a same school.
Anonymous wrote:Should let this go -or- be PO'd and alert other parents. I've let college counseling know and they're "looking into it."
On DC's school SCOIR it has "Fall 2026" listed under "Application Type" - so if you know a student applied to X school, it's easy to ID the student. This class year identifier is not listed for any previous years, just if they applied RD, ED, EA, etc.
For example, only one student applied ED to Wesleyan, and on SCOIR, they're easily ID'd as:
Early Decision - Fall 2026 Denied 3.95
Our school's SCOIR not only lists whether they were accepted or denied with the "Fall 2026" identifier, but also includes GPA and test scores (if they submitted).
Anonymous wrote:Should let this go -or- be PO'd and alert other parents. I've let college counseling know and they're "looking into it."
On DC's school SCOIR it has "Fall 2026" listed under "Application Type" - so if you know a student applied to X school, it's easy to ID the student. This class year identifier is not listed for any previous years, just if they applied RD, ED, EA, etc.
For example, only one student applied ED to Wesleyan, and on SCOIR, they're easily ID'd as:
Early Decision - Fall 2026 Denied 3.95
Our school's SCOIR not only lists whether they were accepted or denied with the "Fall 2026" identifier, but also includes GPA and test scores (if they submitted).
Anonymous wrote:The access to SCOIR or Naviance should be banned from parents and students. Thye should have no right to know other students' stats, identifiable or not. At our school, there are some tiger parents complaining about UMR got into this or that with a lower stats. College admissions is never only about stats!
Anonymous wrote:Does it matter though?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here - thanks for responses. I'll chill. I should just be grateful DC got into their top choice and I'll never need to be on SCOIR again!!
NCS has been doing this for years. It's ridiculous, no alum has agreed to have their test scores and GPA shared.
Anonymous wrote:Should let this go -or- be PO'd and alert other parents. I've let college counseling know and they're "looking into it."
On DC's school SCOIR it has "Fall 2026" listed under "Application Type" - so if you know a student applied to X school, it's easy to ID the student. This class year identifier is not listed for any previous years, just if they applied RD, ED, EA, etc.
For example, only one student applied ED to Wesleyan, and on SCOIR, they're easily ID'd as:
Early Decision - Fall 2026 Denied 3.95
Our school's SCOIR not only lists whether they were accepted or denied with the "Fall 2026" identifier, but also includes GPA and test scores (if they submitted).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The only reason the student is identifiable is because they told their friends where they were applying.
The solution is to not tell your friends every school you are applying to. Learn to keep your business to yourself.
OP here - the bummer is that DC applied ED and was the only student who applied to X school this year. So, it's not that they were sharing their "business" -- it's just going to be obvious once the school lists acceptances...and we all know ED is binding.
Anonymous wrote:FWIW, our school shows "no data" when the pool is so small it would be identifying. Sometimes I have to set the parameters for multiple years so there's enough data for me to see the scattergram, even though I only find last year's data (maybe last 2 years) to be useful. We all know things have changed dramatically from even a couple of years ago.
That said, I have kids who are 20205 and 2026 grads. So when I search now for the class of 2025, I can still sometimes guess who certain kids are. If I know a kid EDed and is a particular major, the major is usually the identifier. But you have to really obsess (which I guess we all do).