Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:all the above and I would also say George Washington, Georgetown, NYU,Anonymous wrote:Boston College, Wake Forest, Colgate, Bucknell, Trinity, Conn College, U Wisconsin, Maryland, etc.
What does the college counselor suggest? The search engines? Does your child have preferences on size, location, SLAC v university, etc? B+ isn't much to go on.
Not sure I'd include the first 3 schools in the B+ category anymore. All three reported admissions rates below 29%. That doesn't sound like B+ anymore.
Sorry. Admission rates below 29% sounds like B+ and maybe even B to me.
Anonymous wrote:Admissions rates don't tell you the stats of the kids who applied.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:all the above and I would also say George Washington, Georgetown, NYU,Anonymous wrote:Boston College, Wake Forest, Colgate, Bucknell, Trinity, Conn College, U Wisconsin, Maryland, etc.
What does the college counselor suggest? The search engines? Does your child have preferences on size, location, SLAC v university, etc? B+ isn't much to go on.
Not sure I'd include the first 3 schools in the B+ category anymore. All three reported admissions rates below 29%. That doesn't sound like B+ anymore.
Anonymous wrote:all the above and I would also say George Washington, Georgetown, NYU,Anonymous wrote:Boston College, Wake Forest, Colgate, Bucknell, Trinity, Conn College, U Wisconsin, Maryland, etc.
What does the college counselor suggest? The search engines? Does your child have preferences on size, location, SLAC v university, etc? B+ isn't much to go on.
all the above and I would also say George Washington, Georgetown, NYU,Anonymous wrote:Boston College, Wake Forest, Colgate, Bucknell, Trinity, Conn College, U Wisconsin, Maryland, etc.
What does the college counselor suggest? The search engines? Does your child have preferences on size, location, SLAC v university, etc? B+ isn't much to go on.
How wonderful! Congrats!!Anonymous wrote:Congratulations! That's terrific. Good luck to him.
Anonymous wrote:How competitive is your DC's high school? B+ at Sidwell or TJ might be different from a B+ at a less challenging high school
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is an interesting thread for me. My DC has a 3.3 UW GAP (4.0 weighted), interesting extracurriculars, 2400 (perfect) SATs, and a 5 on DC's NSL AP exam. (Other AP scores, from this year, not yet in.)
Given his GPA, we have been looking at mid-tier schools. Should I raise the bar?
Since you mention NSL I assume you are in MCPS. That's a low GPA for a smart kid in MCPS so colleges might question the gap between scores and achievement. I posted that mine had a 3.9 UW, which was a 4.6 weighted and that was pretty typical for the kids applying to competitive colleges. Did your DC have a bad freshman year and then improvement soph and junior year? That might help explain the gap.
There are schools that are pretty focused on scores so those might be worth looking at. Otherwise the mid tier schools are a good target.
PP here. DC has significant learning disabilities. DC's GPA reflects a combination of very challenging classes; struggles with writing; organizational challenges; and average processing speed. DC has limited accommodations in school.
In that case you really need to focus on schools that are a good fit academically and will provide appropriate support, not the rankings. College can be a challenge for kids with significant LDs who don't get adequate support.
Please. GTLD kids can go anywhere. Just find the right support.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is an interesting thread for me. My DC has a 3.3 UW GAP (4.0 weighted), interesting extracurriculars, 2400 (perfect) SATs, and a 5 on DC's NSL AP exam. (Other AP scores, from this year, not yet in.)
Given his GPA, we have been looking at mid-tier schools. Should I raise the bar?
Since you mention NSL I assume you are in MCPS. That's a low GPA for a smart kid in MCPS so colleges might question the gap between scores and achievement. I posted that mine had a 3.9 UW, which was a 4.6 weighted and that was pretty typical for the kids applying to competitive colleges. Did your DC have a bad freshman year and then improvement soph and junior year? That might help explain the gap.
There are schools that are pretty focused on scores so those might be worth looking at. Otherwise the mid tier schools are a good target.
PP here. DC has significant learning disabilities. DC's GPA reflects a combination of very challenging classes; struggles with writing; organizational challenges; and average processing speed. DC has limited accommodations in school.
In that case you really need to focus on schools that are a good fit academically and will provide appropriate support, not the rankings. College can be a challenge for kids with significant LDs who don't get adequate support.