Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD recognizes that even with a 4.3 gpa, APs, and interesting ECs, admission to her top choices is iffy. High stats kids are a dime a dozen.
She will also apply to schools that are much less selective where she’s confident she would be accepted, probably with significant merit aid. If she ends up attending one of her lower-ranked choices, she will likely have plenty of her college fund left over for grad school.
Can you suggest some of the schools that your DD would be considering? Every place my similar DC is looking that used to be a safety or target has moved up at least one level. What's a good safety for someone who has worked so hard?
Where are you located? Va, Md, DC or somewhere else? I can give better suggestions if I know where you would be in-state.
Virginia
If your DC is interested in a smaller school, the University of Mary Washington in Fredericksburg offered my older DS significant merit aid when he applied. I’m an alumna so that may have helped. He decided to attend George Mason.
From what I hear, a lot of students are putting VCU and Christopher Newport on their lists. JMU is popular too but gives less merit from what I hear.
Are you hearing this about students taking high rigor applying to these schools? This sounds so different that just a few years ago.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It sounds like there are kids who are already a level higher than yours OP. Too late to try to compete with them. They are going to apply for T20. Assuming yours had good grades, A’s, he will be just fine and if the difference between sanity and crazy for your kid is one AP, honestly, I would drop the one AP.
I'm not sure what this means. Lots of kids get into T20 classes with schedules like what's listed above.
Anonymous wrote:i don't think most of those schools you mentioned would reject someone just for taking a flex class. that's insane.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There’s a big focus on rural kids by AOs - have a friend at Ivy in a leadership role - and rural, whether Wyoming, Hawaii or WV is the golden ticket this year.
💯 and trauma
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD recognizes that even with a 4.3 gpa, APs, and interesting ECs, admission to her top choices is iffy. High stats kids are a dime a dozen.
She will also apply to schools that are much less selective where she’s confident she would be accepted, probably with significant merit aid. If she ends up attending one of her lower-ranked choices, she will likely have plenty of her college fund left over for grad school.
Can you suggest some of the schools that your DD would be considering? Every place my similar DC is looking that used to be a safety or target has moved up at least one level. What's a good safety for someone who has worked so hard?
Where are you located? Va, Md, DC or somewhere else? I can give better suggestions if I know where you would be in-state.
Virginia
If your DC is interested in a smaller school, the University of Mary Washington in Fredericksburg offered my older DS significant merit aid when he applied. I’m an alumna so that may have helped. He decided to attend George Mason.
From what I hear, a lot of students are putting VCU and Christopher Newport on their lists. JMU is popular too but gives less merit from what I hear.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you raise an excellent point about whether it is worth doing this arms race if they are not going to be considered competitive anyway.
I wouldn't turn down a flex period. I don't think the colleges are even aware of it. All they are focusing on is what you are taking, and several APs is strong rigor.
This is really the issue. If the kids is taking all the APs to be considered for UVA, but it going to end up at a school with an average GPA of 3.7, is it even worth it?
Do you not care how your kid does once they get to college?
This. For your and your child's mental health you have to reframe what they are doing in HS as being about developing as a person and a student. If they can handle the 5 APs, are excited about the classes, can still have time for sleep and fun with that schedule, then sure go ahead. But because that will make them better prepared for college not to get in to a particular school. If that added AP is going to massively raise the stress level, mean they aren't getting enough sleep, take away time from focusing on college applications and other demands of senior year, skip it. And if that means they don't get into the school they might otherwise have gotten into (I doubt it would be a defining factor), then that school wasn't the right place for them.
My DD applied last year from APS and most of her friends took a flex period in senior year and I saw them going to a lot of strong schools. DD didn't take flex, not to add another AP but to take an art class she'd never had time for. Her application (transcript, essays, ECs, hobbies) also showed that she loved both art and science.
Also, be aware that it's too soon to really know how the acceptances will settle out. Most RD results are not out yet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you raise an excellent point about whether it is worth doing this arms race if they are not going to be considered competitive anyway.
I wouldn't turn down a flex period. I don't think the colleges are even aware of it. All they are focusing on is what you are taking, and several APs is strong rigor.
This is really the issue. If the kids is taking all the APs to be considered for UVA, but it going to end up at a school with an average GPA of 3.7, is it even worth it?
Do you not care how your kid does once they get to college?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD recognizes that even with a 4.3 gpa, APs, and interesting ECs, admission to her top choices is iffy. High stats kids are a dime a dozen.
She will also apply to schools that are much less selective where she’s confident she would be accepted, probably with significant merit aid. If she ends up attending one of her lower-ranked choices, she will likely have plenty of her college fund left over for grad school.
Can you suggest some of the schools that your DD would be considering? Every place my similar DC is looking that used to be a safety or target has moved up at least one level. What's a good safety for someone who has worked so hard?
Where are you located? Va, Md, DC or somewhere else? I can give better suggestions if I know where you would be in-state.
Virginia
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Next year is supposed to be a population cliff so it should be easier but who knows? I think the question is will your kid be burnt out or can he handle one more ap class? Probably best to compromise- don’t do flex but also don’t do another ap just to have it especially if he’s not into the subject. is there a class he’s more interested in like at a community college if he’s allowed to cross enroll?
This is incorrect, next year is peak. The decrease won’t start until 2026, and it isn’t really a cliff, more like a very gentle
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you raise an excellent point about whether it is worth doing this arms race if they are not going to be considered competitive anyway.
I wouldn't turn down a flex period. I don't think the colleges are even aware of it. All they are focusing on is what you are taking, and several APs is strong rigor.
This is really the issue. If the kids is taking all the APs to be considered for UVA, but it going to end up at a school with an average GPA of 3.7, is it even worth it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you raise an excellent point about whether it is worth doing this arms race if they are not going to be considered competitive anyway.
I wouldn't turn down a flex period. I don't think the colleges are even aware of it. All they are focusing on is what you are taking, and several APs is strong rigor.
Agree with this.
Clemson WAS brutal this year. There's not going to be any guarantee next year. Your kid sounds like a strong student. Just make sure he picks some safeties he really likes.
Anonymous wrote:I think you raise an excellent point about whether it is worth doing this arms race if they are not going to be considered competitive anyway.
I wouldn't turn down a flex period. I don't think the colleges are even aware of it. All they are focusing on is what you are taking, and several APs is strong rigor.