Anonymous wrote:We visited Harvard when in Boston a few years ago and she loved it.
You have to tell kids that every college application is a raffle tickets, and some applications are lottery tickets. You can choose a group to apply to, but you can't choose which one you'll go to until you have your acceptances in hand.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD going to what is regarded as a strong local private next year in 9th Grade. Goal is Ivy League. What do I need to do/know starting now. Is the college coach type thing worth it? They charge 10-15K for one kid.
Your goal or her goal?
Her's. We visited Harvard when in Boston a few years ago and she loved it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD going to what is regarded as a strong local private next year in 9th Grade. Goal is Ivy League. What do I need to do/know starting now. Is the college coach type thing worth it? They charge 10-15K for one kid.
Your goal or her goal?
Anonymous wrote:DD going to what is regarded as a strong local private next year in 9th Grade. Goal is Ivy League. What do I need to do/know starting now. Is the college coach type thing worth it? They charge 10-15K for one kid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD going to what is regarded as a strong local private next year in 9th Grade. Goal is Ivy League. What do I need to do/know starting now. Is the college coach type thing worth it? They charge 10-15K for one kid.
Why?
Be specific.
Not OP, but I'm going to presume it's because she would like for her child to attend one of the best colleges in the country. Is that so terrible?
Anonymous wrote: I agree with everyone that poster is wrong headed about her daughter's education. But since she asked, I can tell you that our unhooked daughter got into a top ivy: a 3.8 or 3.9 from Sidwell or NCS, almost perfect SATS, won national recognition in her passion. Otherwise look elsewhere.
Anonymous wrote: I agree with everyone that poster is wrong headed about her daughter's education. But since she asked, I can tell you that our unhooked daughter got into a top ivy: a 3.8 or 3.9 from Sidwell or NCS, almost perfect SATS, won national recognition in her passion. Otherwise look elsewhere.
Anonymous wrote:If your goal is Ivy (and I agree with others that I want to know if it's HER goal as well), then if you aren't in the categories which PP so excellently laid out above, then she has a better chance of getting in by NOT going to the elite school, and by being the top student at some obscure podunk tiny public HS in the middle of nowhere.
(Run-on sentience on purpose, because I love these Ivy conversations & I amuse myself
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is just all ridiculous, in terms of worrying about this in 9th grade. If your DD is really ready for the top track courses, and asks to take them, she will be placed in them if her record and testing justifies being there. Our experience with 2 different big 3/5 schools and college counseling was that their advice was completely spot on. Our kids were completely without hooks (i.e. girls, white, college educated parents, but not potential huge donors, not recruited athletes) and both got into Ivys (although one chose instead to go to a great small LAC). We did not have any paid college counseling. The kids drove the process themselves. A family friend is an admissions officer at Yale, and she indicated the officers could smell paid college counselor from miles away in terms of ridiculous and insincere activities, and essays clearly inspired and edited by a "professional" not in the voice of the applicant. Really, save your money, perhaps use it for SAT prep if your kid could benefit after seeing how the PSAT goes, and calm down.
I love how easy it is for you to be dismissive of the OP's concerns after having two kids accepted to ivy's yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD going to what is regarded as a strong local private next year in 9th Grade. Goal is Ivy League. What do I need to do/know starting now. Is the college coach type thing worth it? They charge 10-15K for one kid.
If you waited until 9th grade to groom for Ivy, you are too late.
Anonymous wrote:This is just all ridiculous, in terms of worrying about this in 9th grade. If your DD is really ready for the top track courses, and asks to take them, she will be placed in them if her record and testing justifies being there. Our experience with 2 different big 3/5 schools and college counseling was that their advice was completely spot on. Our kids were completely without hooks (i.e. girls, white, college educated parents, but not potential huge donors, not recruited athletes) and both got into Ivys (although one chose instead to go to a great small LAC). We did not have any paid college counseling. The kids drove the process themselves. A family friend is an admissions officer at Yale, and she indicated the officers could smell paid college counselor from miles away in terms of ridiculous and insincere activities, and essays clearly inspired and edited by a "professional" not in the voice of the applicant. Really, save your money, perhaps use it for SAT prep if your kid could benefit after seeing how the PSAT goes, and calm down.