Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I read this board and freaked out (for a minute) about sending my DC to a Big 3 for US. I tried to look deeper at this question to insure I was not harming my child’s academic options. My analysis was that I was not. Private schools publish their college matriculation data and, while public schools do not, admissions data is available. Giving every benefit of the doubt to the public school admission data, I still came to the conclusion that Big 3 certainly doesn’t harm you and probably helps you with college. And I don’t care about Ivies so I didn’t look at that angle. I don’t think USNWR is at all correct (but I had to use some metric), so I used its Top 15–places like UChicago, Northwestern, Duke, Rice, Georgetown. I hear all this message board nonsense about “hooked” kids at the Big3, but I know that’s equally true at my fancy local public high school where I know just as many parents who are alumnae of these places/potential big donors/etc. as well. So do your own homework future readers.
My conclusion was that it really depends on the specific public school. I can easily believe that if you aren’t in one of these few little bubble MCPS/FCPS/APS fancy public schools then maybe you actually do get a public school bump. I wouldn’t know since I haven’t looked at that question.
You are clueless. Wait after March of your child's senior year to give this board a conclusion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where are these mythical public schools without high-achieving students gunning for Ivies? Not in Moco.
Honestly, Einstein is a good place. There are students who apply to Ivies and other top tier schools, but not a ton of them. The Ivy legacy kids whom I’ve met are Donut Hole and won’t be going to Ivies themselves. Top students tend to go to Canada or schools with merit.
Anonymous wrote:I read this board and freaked out (for a minute) about sending my DC to a Big 3 for US. I tried to look deeper at this question to insure I was not harming my child’s academic options. My analysis was that I was not. Private schools publish their college matriculation data and, while public schools do not, admissions data is available. Giving every benefit of the doubt to the public school admission data, I still came to the conclusion that Big 3 certainly doesn’t harm you and probably helps you with college. And I don’t care about Ivies so I didn’t look at that angle. I don’t think USNWR is at all correct (but I had to use some metric), so I used its Top 15–places like UChicago, Northwestern, Duke, Rice, Georgetown. I hear all this message board nonsense about “hooked” kids at the Big3, but I know that’s equally true at my fancy local public high school where I know just as many parents who are alumnae of these places/potential big donors/etc. as well. So do your own homework future readers.
My conclusion was that it really depends on the specific public school. I can easily believe that if you aren’t in one of these few little bubble MCPS/FCPS/APS fancy public schools then maybe you actually do get a public school bump. I wouldn’t know since I haven’t looked at that question.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I read this board and freaked out (for a minute) about sending my DC to a Big 3 for US. I tried to look deeper at this question to insure I was not harming my child’s academic options. My analysis was that I was not. Private schools publish their college matriculation data and, while public schools do not, admissions data is available. Giving every benefit of the doubt to the public school admission data, I still came to the conclusion that Big 3 certainly doesn’t harm you and probably helps you with college. And I don’t care about Ivies so I didn’t look at that angle. I don’t think USNWR is at all correct (but I had to use some metric), so I used its Top 15–places like UChicago, Northwestern, Duke, Rice, Georgetown. I hear all this message board nonsense about “hooked” kids at the Big3, but I know that’s equally true at my fancy local public high school where I know just as many parents who are alumnae of these places/potential big donors/etc. as well. So do your own homework future readers.
My conclusion was that it really depends on the specific public school. I can easily believe that if you aren’t in one of these few little bubble MCPS/FCPS/APS fancy public schools then maybe you actually do get a public school bump. I wouldn’t know since I haven’t looked at that question.
You are clueless. Wait after March of your child's senior year to give this board a conclusion.
Anonymous wrote:This has been true for decades. If you want an amazing education, send your kid to the “big 3”. If you are a double legacy with status and a sport, you will still get into an ivy. But if you’re a normal family and ivy is the goal, you’re much better off at something like an Alexandria or south Arlington public high school - where you can stand out more easily and you get the benefit of a high free lunch and very diverse population. Colleges love this. They act like they’re doing something good by taking “disadvantaged” kids from low scoring/failing high schools but really all they did was take one of the handful of UMC kids. That same kid at Langley would be 50/50 for UVA.
Anonymous wrote:These schools are not "deflating" grades; the public schools have inflated them.
Anonymous wrote:I read this board and freaked out (for a minute) about sending my DC to a Big 3 for US. I tried to look deeper at this question to insure I was not harming my child’s academic options. My analysis was that I was not. Private schools publish their college matriculation data and, while public schools do not, admissions data is available. Giving every benefit of the doubt to the public school admission data, I still came to the conclusion that Big 3 certainly doesn’t harm you and probably helps you with college. And I don’t care about Ivies so I didn’t look at that angle. I don’t think USNWR is at all correct (but I had to use some metric), so I used its Top 15–places like UChicago, Northwestern, Duke, Rice, Georgetown. I hear all this message board nonsense about “hooked” kids at the Big3, but I know that’s equally true at my fancy local public high school where I know just as many parents who are alumnae of these places/potential big donors/etc. as well. So do your own homework future readers.
My conclusion was that it really depends on the specific public school. I can easily believe that if you aren’t in one of these few little bubble MCPS/FCPS/APS fancy public schools then maybe you actually do get a public school bump. I wouldn’t know since I haven’t looked at that question.
Anonymous wrote:These schools are not "deflating" grades; the public schools have inflated them.
Anonymous wrote:There are exponentially fewer private school kids than public school kids. That skews the perception of who is getting admitted.