Anonymous wrote:The kids that wait for RD are much stronger applicants. They are confident. The ones that ED aren't as strong applicants and need the extra edge.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No ED, no hooks, five T15/ivy admits RD. Top students do fine in RD
You hear this but then you see a lot of kids with extremely good academic credentials- like near perfect- who land at something like Villanova
Because they do NOT have extremely good academic credentials in reality, and one of these things was likely true of their 1500+, 4.0 uw, took 10APs:
1. Their weighted GPA was 4.4 but that is not even top 10% at their high school and only 3-4 kids get in to elite private/ivies unhooked. People way overestimate rank, or think it does not matter: relative rank matters and is decipherable by AOs.
2. They were at or near the top, but they skipped out on the hardest APs at their high school to keep their spot as Val or Sal not realizing the kids they were "competing" with were getting As in the hardest courses and doing all the rest.
3. OR, they had bad letters of rec. There are some a-hole kids, ask teachers--we know.
4. They had no ECs . Nothing to speak of outside of school that they cared about, and nothing within the school community that they got involved in more than peripherally.
5. They want to go to Villanova because they’re tired of the grind and competition, and don’t want to be around the other students for 4 more years who all did what it took to get into Yale or Princeton.
6. They got a full ride to Villanova and they’re saving their 529 for grad school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No ED, no hooks, five T15/ivy admits RD. Top students do fine in RD
You hear this but then you see a lot of kids with extremely good academic credentials- like near perfect- who land at something like Villanova
Because they do NOT have extremely good academic credentials in reality, and one of these things was likely true of their 1500+, 4.0 uw, took 10APs:
1. Their weighted GPA was 4.4 but that is not even top 10% at their high school and only 3-4 kids get in to elite private/ivies unhooked. People way overestimate rank, or think it does not matter: relative rank matters and is decipherable by AOs.
2. They were at or near the top, but they skipped out on the hardest APs at their high school to keep their spot as Val or Sal not realizing the kids they were "competing" with were getting As in the hardest courses and doing all the rest.
3. OR, they had bad letters of rec. There are some a-hole kids, ask teachers--we know.
4. They had no ECs . Nothing to speak of outside of school that they cared about, and nothing within the school community that they got involved in more than peripherally.
Anonymous wrote:I think last year will turn out to be a bit of an outlier, first year no AA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A third of the kids at my child’s school have committed to a college and nearly all of these were ED/REA. Medium size private.
same. my guess is that >75% applied somewhere ED or REA
Proving the point that high percentages of ED applicants is a private school thing. Not everyone EDs. But it will feel like it if you are at a private. And maybe colleges expect you to ED and will hold it against you. We are public. We applied for financial aid. I don’t think schools will hold it against my kid that he didn’t ED. Only the very rich and very poor can afford to do that.
Anonymous wrote:^ yep people exaggerate their kid’s credentials, test scores, etc
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No ED, no hooks, five T15/ivy admits RD. Top students do fine in RD
You hear this but then you see a lot of kids with extremely good academic credentials- like near perfect- who land at something like Villanova
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No ED, no hooks, five T15/ivy admits RD. Top students do fine in RD
You hear this but then you see a lot of kids with extremely good academic credentials- like near perfect- who land at something like Villanova
.Anonymous wrote:No ED, no hooks, five T15/ivy admits RD. Top students do fine in RD