Anonymous wrote:1550 is not considered high.
Anonymous wrote:this thread is hella depressing. what's the point of racking up all these stats?
or are we all just obsessing over the wrong list of schools?
like there's no hope for me fr.
Anonymous wrote:The smartest thing colleges could do, financially speaking, is admit whip-smart, hard-working CS and engineering majors. These are the kids who have the best odds of striking it rich and having something to give back to the college 20 or 40 years down the road. They are also more likely to contribute to society with patents, innovation, technological advance, improved productivity, etc. Colleges are short-sighted to not woo them.
Anonymous wrote:The smartest thing colleges could do, financially speaking, is admit whip-smart, hard-working CS and engineering majors. These are the kids who have the best odds of striking it rich and having something to give back to the college 20 or 40 years down the road. They are also more likely to contribute to society with patents, innovation, technological advance, improved productivity, etc. Colleges are short-sighted to not woo them.
Anonymous wrote:this thread is hella depressing. what's the point of racking up all these stats?
or are we all just obsessing over the wrong list of schools?
like there's no hope for me fr.
Anonymous wrote:How about this for a reality check:
4.0 UW, 4.86 W
1560 SAT, 13 AP 8 5s, 5 4s (non-STEM), AP Calc BC 10th grade, through MVC and Linear algebra
4 year varsity athlete
national CS awards
part time job
Rejected: Carnegie Mellon, Northwestern, Brown
WL: Cornell, Northeastern, Case Western
Accepted: UMD, RIT, RPI
CS major
MCPS Magnet
At UMD on scholarship
Anonymous wrote:How about this for a reality check:
4.0 UW, 4.86 W
1560 SAT, 13 AP 8 5s, 5 4s (non-STEM), AP Calc BC 10th grade, through MVC and Linear algebra
4 year varsity athlete
national CS awards
part time job
Rejected: Carnegie Mellon, Northwestern, Brown
WL: Cornell, Northeastern, Case Western
Accepted: UMD, RIT, RPI
CS major
MCPS Magnet
At UMD on scholarship
Anonymous wrote:3.94, 1580 (first try), took highest rigor advanced classes, good internship and non profit involvement, lots of school related leadership roles and submitted research. No national awards or APs.
Rejected. Upenn ED1 , uva
Accepted to targets: nyu, pitt, umd, case western and usc
Attending NYU, business
Anonymous wrote:How about this for a reality check:
4.0 UW, 4.86 W
1560 SAT, 13 AP 8 5s, 5 4s (non-STEM), AP Calc BC 10th grade, through MVC and Linear algebra
4 year varsity athlete
national CS awards
part time job
Rejected: Carnegie Mellon, Northwestern, Brown
WL: Cornell, Northeastern, Case Western
Accepted: UMD, RIT, RPI
CS major
MCPS Magnet
At UMD on scholarship
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I think that is one of the reasons colleges want strong extracurriculars, the primary reason being they want engaged students adding to campus life. Perfect grades and top SAT scores while spending 30+ hours a week doing other activities shows they can handle the rigor.
I don't think colleges really want students who will struggle academically, at least not many of them.
LOL. How does a student spend 30+ hours per week on EC's in addition to actual school?
I have a kid like that, he's my energizer bunny type kid. He has long days, and busy weekends.
I also had a kid who spent about 28-30 hours a week on ECs: 20 for performing arts and 8-10 on clubs, volunteering work. Took every hard class possible and loved the challenge, a wall of 5’s on the app, had done all the hard ones by the end of junior year. They were just more efficient and naturally intellectually quick so they spent very little time on homework compared to other students near the top of the class. They are at an ivy. Many of their peers are of the same mold, but it is definitely under half. They remain near the top in a competitive and difficult major. No one was their level in their high school. They needed a T10/ivy for fit to finally study among a large group of similar minds and not always be the smartest and fastest thinker in the room.
Your kid did not need an ivy to not be the smartest thinker in the room. There are several universities (even far outside T20) where your kid would not have been the smartest in the room by a long shot. University of Alabama for example has a very large cohort of insanely smart ivy/ivy+ accepted/level kids, due to huge scholarship $ and very specialized top level programs.
Not every family can afford an ivy, no matter what type of academic rockstar their kid is -- that is to say, there are large concentrations of kids like this at many universities, not just ivies.