Anonymous wrote:Why are you mentally jumping the gun? You must have some deep bitterness you need to let go of here. You've concocted a whole scenario painting your son as victim before receiving any rejection letter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This happened to us. And it was a learning experience. And it kind of ruined the reputation the school we didn’t get into for us and others who thought certain deserving and exceptional students would get in. When others got in for connections or other unknown realms (not grades or even sports), many families were a bit shocked. I later learned quite a few didn’t families skipped applying to the school altogether because the knew it was a terrible experience for most kids. The thing is, kids are generally ok with kids who are great students or great athletes getting in. It’s the totally random parent hooked kids that 1) piss off the classmates, and 2) lower the schools reputation. But it certainly is a lesson. Find a solid second choice and you will be fine.
“Deserving and exceptional” aren’t the only criteria schools look for, though. I’m sorry you didn’t know that.
Anonymous wrote:This happened to us. And it was a learning experience. And it kind of ruined the reputation the school we didn’t get into for us and others who thought certain deserving and exceptional students would get in. When others got in for connections or other unknown realms (not grades or even sports), many families were a bit shocked. I later learned quite a few didn’t families skipped applying to the school altogether because the knew it was a terrible experience for most kids. The thing is, kids are generally ok with kids who are great students or great athletes getting in. It’s the totally random parent hooked kids that 1) piss off the classmates, and 2) lower the schools reputation. But it certainly is a lesson. Find a solid second choice and you will be fine.
Anonymous wrote:I am trying to anticipate a situation here. DS is an 8th grader at a K-8. He and a very good friend of his are both applying to a very competitive high school, and have both indicated that it is their top choice. The friend's parents are what would be considered VIPs ... big donors, big connections. Apparently, they even had a high ranking politician write a letter of recommendation for their son. DS is a better student, has much higher SSAT scores (based on what the friend shared), and better EC's but the friend told DS he's confident he will get in because of what his parents did. We are a full pay family, and have always donated to our school's annual fund, but are certainly not big donors or VIPs.
DS is already demoralized at the prospect of him not getting admitted, and the friend getting admitted. I know this is a likely scenario. I also understand that life is not fair, and can totally grasp that as an adult .. but how would you explain this situation to a 13 year old?