Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Waste of time for my NOVA unhooked CS major: Harvard and Penn denied; UVA and NEU waitlist. Still accepted 8. Enrolled with some merit as direct admit to CS at UMD, so he's happy.
Congratulations! UMD is a great school!
I think the issue is that the posters who insist rankings matter, or that certain schools do not matter, mislead well intentioned applicant parents into thinking that they too can get into (whatever school here). Each applicant is obviously different, and sometimes parents forget that another parents point of reference is also very different.
Anonymous wrote:Waste of time for my NOVA unhooked CS major: Harvard and Penn denied; UVA and NEU waitlist. Still accepted 8. Enrolled with some merit as direct admit to CS at UMD, so he's happy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:and not just first job blah blah - 30 years out and my ivy degree still opens doors..
Good for you
they were making a point - no need to get snippy
Anonymous wrote:My kid applied to a few. The outcome was what the stats would have predicted,
I felt it was important that she did not think we had blocked some dream destiny for her or that she would have gotten in if we were willing to take the chance.
I was proud of how open she was to the multiple options she did have. (It helped that second tier LACs are quite generous with merit and. It made her feel sought after. And yes, it is nice start out adulting with no student loans!
Anonymous wrote:if a reach is a T15, and kid gets in, suck it up and pay for it
below that level is when affordability comes into the equation 100%
T15 degree will create lifetime equity and pay for itself many times over during career - I know that’s an unpopular opinion on DCUM. Every hiring manager I know (in multiple industries, not just finance), is influenced at some level by undergrad college on resume
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:and not just first job blah blah - 30 years out and my ivy degree still opens doors..
Good for you
Anonymous wrote:and not just first job blah blah - 30 years out and my ivy degree still opens doors..