Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is there some advantage to sailing or Equestrian over cheaper, more mundane sports like cross country or swimming
Yes. There is a much smaller pool of applicants who do these sports and the schools need to fill up those teams, so you have a huge leg up in admissions.
Anonymous wrote:I think this answers the OP's questionAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is there some advantage to sailing or Equestrian over cheaper, more mundane sports like cross country or swimming
Yes. There is a much smaller pool of applicants who do these sports and the schools need to fill up those teams, so you have a huge leg up in admissions.
the suburban middle class I should addAnonymous wrote:I grew up poor, I was on free lunch at one point. But my parents scratched their way in to the middle class by high school. So no golden ticket for me.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't care if T20s/Ivies and all the rest admit wealthier kids or that wealthier kids tend to have better EC opportunities than regular kids. I just want T20s/Ivies/etal to stop pretending that they show no preference (we are "holistic" in our admissions) - what a joke
They also admit "poor kids" or rural kids with lesser opportunities. They want smart kids who will excel and be leaders at college. They do a great job of identifying those who didnt' grow up with all the opportunities an UMC+ lifestyle affords you.
I grew up poor, I was on free lunch at one point. But my parents scratched their way in to the middle class by high school. So no golden ticket for me.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't care if T20s/Ivies and all the rest admit wealthier kids or that wealthier kids tend to have better EC opportunities than regular kids. I just want T20s/Ivies/etal to stop pretending that they show no preference (we are "holistic" in our admissions) - what a joke
They also admit "poor kids" or rural kids with lesser opportunities. They want smart kids who will excel and be leaders at college. They do a great job of identifying those who didnt' grow up with all the opportunities an UMC+ lifestyle affords you.
Anonymous wrote:It's not that they serve as a proxy or some sort of secret signal of wealth. It's that colleges want students who are well rounded, and wealth allows you to pursue more ECs, or pursue the more extensively. So the wealthy student has an advantage. There was a time when ECs were by and large something you did through schools (sports, music, etc.) so theoretically everyone was operating on the same playing field. Not so much the case anymore.
Anonymous wrote:I don't care if T20s/Ivies and all the rest admit wealthier kids or that wealthier kids tend to have better EC opportunities than regular kids. I just want T20s/Ivies/etal to stop pretending that they show no preference (we are "holistic" in our admissions) - what a joke
Anonymous wrote:lol which one has better results?Anonymous wrote:No. How much you spend on it doesn't matter. You can spend a million on your kid's football training, or have his come up through an inner city football program. You can spend a fortune on film equipment and camps or you can send your kid to the free film course in the city. And so on.
I think this answers the OP's questionAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is there some advantage to sailing or Equestrian over cheaper, more mundane sports like cross country or swimming
Yes. There is a much smaller pool of applicants who do these sports and the schools need to fill up those teams, so you have a huge leg up in admissions.
Anonymous wrote:Is there some advantage to sailing or Equestrian over cheaper, more mundane sports like cross country or swimming
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sailing
Rowing
Equestrian
Lacrosse
Ski Racing
Not sure, my kids did sailing, rowing, lacrosse, golf but most expensive was volleyball.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sailing
Rowing
Equestrian
Lacrosse
Ski Racing
Not sure, my kids did sailing, rowing, lacrosse, golf but most expensive was volleyball.