Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People are just jealous accept it and move on that Newark student accomplished a lot and deserved the acceptances.
Not jealous in the least...I think it is great for him! I think it is also fine to post about him or others with similar stats and hooks on places like this. What I object to is someone posting a snippet of his story with the clickbait title that this one has. There is zero shame in using all advantages that are available...they should be used and I am glad it worked for this kid!
Saying John Doe got into Yale with a 1310 SAT so don't be thinking it isn't possible is very different from saying John Doe got into Yale with a 1310 SAT and he is FGLI/from a rural unrepresented area/a recruited athlete/the kid of a famous rich person/etc.
Idiotic thing to write. Do you expect posters to fit the entire story in the thread title ?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People are just jealous accept it and move on that Newark student accomplished a lot and deserved the acceptances.
Not jealous in the least...I think it is great for him! I think it is also fine to post about him or others with similar stats and hooks on places like this. What I object to is someone posting a snippet of his story with the clickbait title that this one has. There is zero shame in using all advantages that are available...they should be used and I am glad it worked for this kid!
Saying John Doe got into Yale with a 1310 SAT so don't be thinking it isn't possible is very different from saying John Doe got into Yale with a 1310 SAT and he is FGLI/from a rural unrepresented area/a recruited athlete/the kid of a famous rich person/etc.
Anonymous wrote:This is why you have the very poor and the very rich at these schools. Very few in the middle and it becomes a very segregated campus.
Anonymous wrote:My friend's DD got into Princeton REA with a 1500. Not FGLI or URM.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People are just jealous accept it and move on that Newark student accomplished a lot and deserved the acceptances.
Not jealous in the least...I think it is great for him! I think it is also fine to post about him or others with similar stats and hooks on places like this. What I object to is someone posting a snippet of his story with the clickbait title that this one has. There is zero shame in using all advantages that are available...they should be used and I am glad it worked for this kid!
Saying John Doe got into Yale with a 1310 SAT so don't be thinking it isn't possible is very different from saying John Doe got into Yale with a 1310 SAT and he is FGLI/from a rural unrepresented area/a recruited athlete/the kid of a famous rich person/etc.
Anonymous wrote:People are just jealous accept it and move on that Newark student accomplished a lot and deserved the acceptances.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As long as you meet the threshold, other parts of your application come into play.
A good example this year:
https://nypost.com/2025/04/15/us-news/nj-high-school-senior-accepted-to-7-ivy-league-colleges-im-still-processing-it/
Arts High School in Newark.
Stats: 1480 on his SATs and 34 on the ACTs
Acceptance from Yale, Harvard, Princeton, Columbia and Brown, the University of Pennsylvania and Dartmouth College.
It never occurred to you that acceptance standards might be lower for a first gen Latino student?
1500+ or 34+ fits the bill in terms of threshold. Anyone who says otherwise
is just ignorant.
We heard 1480/33 is the new threshold now with test optional gone at most places….
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He is first generation, and his parents are immigrants - he is from the inner city of Newark. Glad his efforts were recognized. He was not given the same silver spoon most others had and fought the odds.
But fgli kids are the silver spoon kids in the college admissions racket.
That’s the right thing to do. Otherwise, there won’t be much social mobility. I say this as a UMC white mom whose very high stat DD did not get into T20. My kid will be fine regardless of which college she goes. But, Fgli kids need connections/resources offered by top schools.