Anonymous wrote:1. Number one is basically valedictorian.
2. My sibling is her age and got a 3.5 gpa and 1280 on sats and no hooks and got into hyps. Yes, it was waaaay easier in the eighties. Fewer applicants.
Anonymous wrote:Was it really that easy back then? Sandburg was 9th in her public high school class and got accepted to Harvard. Did she do something extraordinary like ranked tennis player??
Her dad went to Hopkins and was an Ophthalmologist, so they were full pay I’m sure that helped.
Anonymous wrote:IMHO this is the most ridiculous thread of all times.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Probably a large high school.
And, most people then would not have even applied to the Ivy leagues, either assuming they couldn't get in or couldn't afford it.
True. Loans weren't really an option when she graduated high school. I'm her age. I went to Cornell, as my father literally got an inheritance from a rich uncle that paid for it, but many of my peers who were as smart or smarter than me went to SUNY schools because private schools were not affordable. Without that money, I'd probably be a proud SUNY Binghamton grad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Was it really that easy back then? Sandburg was 9th in her public high school class and got accepted to Harvard. Did she do something extraordinary like ranked tennis player??
Her dad went to Hopkins and was an Ophthalmologist, so they were full pay I’m sure that helped.
Idk what she had or not but being full pay is peanuts for these wealthy schools with multibillion endowments, unless you can donate above millions, you get no bump in admissions.
Wasn’t Harvard needs blind back then?
Need blind for admission I think, but didn’t offer aid. I have a friend who graduated high school around 1982. He was valedictorian of his tiny high school in Nowhere, TX. He got into Harvard but his family had no money and he got no aid, so he couldn’t go. He went to UT Austin instead.
I think the original point is that competition for admission was lower back then, and presumably Harvard’s yield was lower as well, as a significant number of admits simply wouldn’t have been able to afford the tuition.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Was it really that easy back then? Sandburg was 9th in her public high school class and got accepted to Harvard. Did she do something extraordinary like ranked tennis player??
Her dad went to Hopkins and was an Ophthalmologist, so they were full pay I’m sure that helped.
Idk what she had or not but being full pay is peanuts for these wealthy schools with multibillion endowments, unless you can donate above millions, you get no bump in admissions.
Wasn’t Harvard needs blind back then?
Need blind for admission I think, but didn’t offer aid. I have a friend who graduated high school around 1982. He was valedictorian of his tiny high school in Nowhere, TX. He got into Harvard but his family had no money and he got no aid, so he couldn’t go. He went to UT Austin instead.
I think the original point is that competition for admission was lower back then, and presumably Harvard’s yield was lower as well, as a significant number of admits simply wouldn’t have been able to afford the tuition.
Harvard offered aid then.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Was it really that easy back then? Sandburg was 9th in her public high school class and got accepted to Harvard. Did she do something extraordinary like ranked tennis player??
Her dad went to Hopkins and was an Ophthalmologist, so they were full pay I’m sure that helped.
Idk what she had or not but being full pay is peanuts for these wealthy schools with multibillion endowments, unless you can donate above millions, you get no bump in admissions.
Wasn’t Harvard needs blind back then?
Need blind for admission I think, but didn’t offer aid. I have a friend who graduated high school around 1982. He was valedictorian of his tiny high school in Nowhere, TX. He got into Harvard but his family had no money and he got no aid, so he couldn’t go. He went to UT Austin instead.
I think the original point is that competition for admission was lower back then, and presumably Harvard’s yield was lower as well, as a significant number of admits simply wouldn’t have been able to afford the tuition.
Harvard offered aid then.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Was it really that easy back then? Sandburg was 9th in her public high school class and got accepted to Harvard. Did she do something extraordinary like ranked tennis player??
Her dad went to Hopkins and was an Ophthalmologist, so they were full pay I’m sure that helped.
Idk what she had or not but being full pay is peanuts for these wealthy schools with multibillion endowments, unless you can donate above millions, you get no bump in admissions.
Wasn’t Harvard needs blind back then?
Need blind for admission I think, but didn’t offer aid. I have a friend who graduated high school around 1982. He was valedictorian of his tiny high school in Nowhere, TX. He got into Harvard but his family had no money and he got no aid, so he couldn’t go. He went to UT Austin instead.
I think the original point is that competition for admission was lower back then, and presumably Harvard’s yield was lower as well, as a significant number of admits simply wouldn’t have been able to afford the tuition.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Was it really that easy back then? Sandburg was 9th in her public high school class and got accepted to Harvard. Did she do something extraordinary like ranked tennis player??
Her dad went to Hopkins and was an Ophthalmologist, so they were full pay I’m sure that helped.
Idk what she had or not but being full pay is peanuts for these wealthy schools with multibillion endowments, unless you can donate above millions, you get no bump in admissions.
Wasn’t Harvard needs blind back then?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Was it really that easy back then? Sandburg was 9th in her public high school class and got accepted to Harvard. Did she do something extraordinary like ranked tennis player??
Her dad went to Hopkins and was an Ophthalmologist, so they were full pay I’m sure that helped.
Idk what she had or not but being full pay is peanuts for these wealthy schools with multibillion endowments, unless you can donate above millions, you get no bump in admissions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Probably a large high school.
And, most people then would not have even applied to the Ivy leagues, either assuming they couldn't get in or couldn't afford it.
True. Loans weren't really an option when she graduated high school. I'm her age. I went to Cornell, as my father literally got an inheritance from a rich uncle that paid for it, but many of my peers who were as smart or smarter than me went to SUNY schools because private schools were not affordable. Without that money, I'd probably be a proud SUNY Binghamton grad.
Really? I'm 43 and loans were absolutely widely available when I went to college in 1996. Did it change that much from the mid 80s to the mid 90s?