Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Like so many straight A students who were chief school newspaper editor, captain of a varsity sports team, volunteering, and more who can't even get to VA Tech. I don't know what people who get into schools like Michigan or the Ivy Leagues are doing in high school.
My daughter's friend who got into Yale was an Asian male with a very high wGPA who won Science Olympiad competitions and is an advanced string player.
Straight A doesn't mean anything, OP, you should know this. There is a world's difference between an A in a regular classs and an A in an AP class. Kids who get into the top colleges have 10+ APs, have a national level EC, etc. Your newpaper editing and team captainship worked a generation ago, but not today.
This is sounds exhausting. Kids have no time to be kids.
They have a ton of time. It's really not that unachievable. We have a ton of college options. If you don't want to be competitive for the top ones, tap out and go to a decent one.
If you go to school all day, play sports after school, eat dinner and have hours of homework, how the hell do you have a ton if time?
Anonymous wrote:Like so many straight A students who were chief school newspaper editor, captain of a varsity sports team, volunteering, and more who can't even get to VA Tech. I don't know what people who get into schools like Michigan or the Ivy Leagues are doing in high school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Full pay helps
Do you indicate full pay on the application? How does full pay help?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Like so many straight A students who were chief school newspaper editor, captain of a varsity sports team, volunteering, and more who can't even get to VA Tech. I don't know what people who get into schools like Michigan or the Ivy Leagues are doing in high school.
My daughter's friend who got into Yale was an Asian male with a very high wGPA who won Science Olympiad competitions and is an advanced string player.
Straight A doesn't mean anything, OP, you should know this. There is a world's difference between an A in a regular classs and an A in an AP class. Kids who get into the top colleges have 10+ APs, have a national level EC, etc. Your newpaper editing and team captainship worked a generation ago, but not today.
This is sounds exhausting. Kids have no time to be kids.
They have a ton of time. It's really not that unachievable. We have a ton of college options. If you don't want to be competitive for the top ones, tap out and go to a decent one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most colleges are very easy to get into.
This. There are thousands of schools that most kids can get into.
Anonymous wrote:Parent of rising college freshman here. The best advice I’ve got is to get off DCUM. It creates extra anxiety about the process.
My child, who was top 25% of class with “only” 6 APs and “only” two activities, got into all the schools she applied to. She received merit from most. These weren’t unknown regional schools, either. Many were state flagships. She didn’t have a hook, no national recognitions, etc.
It’ll be okay.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Getting into the second tier schools like Mich really isn’t that hard. You just need the stats and scores. And you need to be strategic, know which regions and which schools the college likes the pull kids from. There are schools that have 3-4 kids accepted into Mich every year. This may not be where your HS sends kids. So figure out if they send kids to NYU or another school.
I disagree. Michigan routinely denies valedictorians
Anonymous wrote:What does national level ECs (extra curriculars)” mean?
Anonymous wrote:Full pay helps
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most colleges are very easy to get into.
This. There are thousands of schools that most kids can get into.
Sure, but they’re schools at risk of closing. No thanks
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Go to a top private school. You can get into Yale or another top10 school without the nationally ranked extracurriculars. Just do extremely well in school (top 5-10%) and have ordinary extracurriculars (head of a few clubs, etc). It's extremely hard to be at or near the top of a class of very bright kids but it's a pretty reliable formula.
So easy. Just be top top top. Thanks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most colleges are very easy to get into.
This. There are thousands of schools that most kids can get into.
Sure, but they’re schools at risk of closing. No thanks