Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fwiw, which is nothing. I'm from one of the southern states where all of these kids want to enroll in the state supported institutions, and I'm glad these schools are being so selective. It's not the U of ....'s job to entertain your out of state kids because they want a "fun school" in a warm climate. That is not their mission. If the school wants your kid because your kid is awesome or they want your tuition $$, great, but stop complaining about selectivity. There are thousands of in state kids who also have great stats and a bright future, AND are residents of the state that supports the institution.
I’m not from a warm, fun state but I agree with you!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is where stupid people who think they are intelligent start talking about "yield protection".
Yield protection is not a thing at state schools but is at some private ones. Typically these are ones that value "demonstrated interest". This is a clue that they might take a slightly less "qualified" (however this is defined) kid over a more qualified one if they think the kid will attend. Only a clue, college admissions is not a transparent process so one can never know can we.
Why every applicant does not "demonstrate interest" at every school they apply to is beyond me. If you want to attend, you must make them think "you are my #1 school and I would love to attend, I've been dreaming bout it"
Now post covid, with all the virtual visits, it is extremely simple to "demonstrate interest"
So as a parent who’s new to this process—how exactly do you demonstrate interest beyond a glowing, enthusiastic essay?
According to our CCO - visit, follow on instagram and interact with posts, do online info sessions and click through links in the emails they send.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These should not come as surprises. Many more qualified applicants applying to southern non or less woke university environments.
Buzzwords buzzwords buzzwords. Completely invalidates everything you said.
DP. The PP is correct. Truth hurts, I guess?
Nope! It's just a real life example of "old man yells at cloud"
Hardly. Many people actually are realizing that schools in the south are often far less ridiculous when it comes to social policies and protests. There, I didn't even use the buzzword that triggers you so!![]()
The "non-woke" schools you rave about usually just have more prevalent racism and homophobia. Not sure I'd call that "less ridiculous social policies".
Nobody's triggered sweetie, that's just the voices in your head![]()
Really? Provide some actual citations which prove your claim. In reality, the "non-woke" schools simply don't have screaming, unhinged, nutjobs protesting every single thing and accusing others of "racism" or whatever the "ism" of the day is.
https://www.npr.org/2021/11/05/1052650979/mcwhorters-new-book-woke-racism-attacks-leading-thinkers-on-race
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is where stupid people who think they are intelligent start talking about "yield protection".
Yield protection is not a thing at state schools but is at some private ones. Typically these are ones that value "demonstrated interest". This is a clue that they might take a slightly less "qualified" (however this is defined) kid over a more qualified one if they think the kid will attend. Only a clue, college admissions is not a transparent process so one can never know can we.
False. Some publics like virginia tech do practice yield protection.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is where stupid people who think they are intelligent start talking about "yield protection".
Yield protection is not a thing at state schools but is at some private ones. Typically these are ones that value "demonstrated interest". This is a clue that they might take a slightly less "qualified" (however this is defined) kid over a more qualified one if they think the kid will attend. Only a clue, college admissions is not a transparent process so one can never know can we.
Anonymous wrote:Fwiw, which is nothing. I'm from one of the southern states where all of these kids want to enroll in the state supported institutions, and I'm glad these schools are being so selective. It's not the U of ....'s job to entertain your out of state kids because they want a "fun school" in a warm climate. That is not their mission. If the school wants your kid because your kid is awesome or they want your tuition $$, great, but stop complaining about selectivity. There are thousands of in state kids who also have great stats and a bright future, AND are residents of the state that supports the institution.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is where stupid people who think they are intelligent start talking about "yield protection".
Yield protection is not a thing at state schools but is at some private ones. Typically these are ones that value "demonstrated interest". This is a clue that they might take a slightly less "qualified" (however this is defined) kid over a more qualified one if they think the kid will attend. Only a clue, college admissions is not a transparent process so one can never know can we.
Why every applicant does not "demonstrate interest" at every school they apply to is beyond me. If you want to attend, you must make them think "you are my #1 school and I would love to attend, I've been dreaming bout it"
Now post covid, with all the virtual visits, it is extremely simple to "demonstrate interest"
So as a parent who’s new to this process—how exactly do you demonstrate interest beyond a glowing, enthusiastic essay?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These should not come as surprises. Many more qualified applicants applying to southern non or less woke university environments.
Buzzwords buzzwords buzzwords. Completely invalidates everything you said.
Anonymous wrote:Surprised (but not shocked) my son was rejected UF and not even offered online. He wouldn't have gone anyways. but he is business- GPA 4.8, superscore 33, varsity sports, good EC's etc. Never visited.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These should not come as surprises. Many more qualified applicants applying to southern non or less woke university environments.
Buzzwords buzzwords buzzwords. Completely invalidates everything you said.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These should not come as surprises. Many more qualified applicants applying to southern non or less woke university environments.
Buzzwords buzzwords buzzwords. Completely invalidates everything you said.
DP. The PP is correct. Truth hurts, I guess?
Nope! It's just a real life example of "old man yells at cloud"
Hardly. Many people actually are realizing that schools in the south are often far less ridiculous when it comes to social policies and protests. There, I didn't even use the buzzword that triggers you so!![]()
The "non-woke" schools you rave about usually just have more prevalent racism and homophobia. Not sure I'd call that "less ridiculous social policies".
Nobody's triggered sweetie, that's just the voices in your head![]()
Anonymous wrote:Clemson, Tulane and Northeastern have surprised me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is where stupid people who think they are intelligent start talking about "yield protection".
Yield protection is not a thing at state schools but is at some private ones. Typically these are ones that value "demonstrated interest". This is a clue that they might take a slightly less "qualified" (however this is defined) kid over a more qualified one if they think the kid will attend. Only a clue, college admissions is not a transparent process so one can never know can we.
Why every applicant does not "demonstrate interest" at every school they apply to is beyond me. If you want to attend, you must make them think "you are my #1 school and I would love to attend, I've been dreaming bout it"
Now post covid, with all the virtual visits, it is extremely simple to "demonstrate interest"
So as a parent who’s new to this process—how exactly do you demonstrate interest beyond a glowing, enthusiastic essay?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is where stupid people who think they are intelligent start talking about "yield protection".
Yield protection is not a thing at state schools but is at some private ones. Typically these are ones that value "demonstrated interest". This is a clue that they might take a slightly less "qualified" (however this is defined) kid over a more qualified one if they think the kid will attend. Only a clue, college admissions is not a transparent process so one can never know can we.
Why every applicant does not "demonstrate interest" at every school they apply to is beyond me. If you want to attend, you must make them think "you are my #1 school and I would love to attend, I've been dreaming bout it"
Now post covid, with all the virtual visits, it is extremely simple to "demonstrate interest"