Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much money did that cost??
Not OP but about a third of the colleges my DS applied to have no application fee. And they are top schools
Is this a humblebrag? My DS got some emails about no application fee for some schools, but only for schools that were recruiting him (he's a very good student and these were schools a step below him).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much money did that cost??
Not OP but about a third of the colleges my DS applied to have no application fee. And they are top schools
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just curious, what top school doesn't have an application fee? I think some Catholic colleges suspend the fee if you are coming from a Catholic high school.
To name a few - Colby, Carleton, Grinnell, Oberlin
Yep, they figure more students will apply if free and no extra essay. Then they can reject more applicants, appear more selective and move up the US News rankings. All a game to them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Odd. My DC applied to 12 schools and his applications were pretty uniform because he worked on all of them before submitting anything. When he polished one, he carried that polishing over to others.
Some kids perform well early, others perform better under the intensity of deadlines.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just curious, what top school doesn't have an application fee? I think some Catholic colleges suspend the fee if you are coming from a Catholic high school.
To name a few - Colby, Carleton, Grinnell, Oberlin
Anonymous wrote:Odd. My DC applied to 12 schools and his applications were pretty uniform because he worked on all of them before submitting anything. When he polished one, he carried that polishing over to others.
Anonymous wrote:If you are applying to the most highly selective schools those with admissions around 12% and below, you do indeed need to send out more applications that if you are applying to schools in the 50% and higher admissions range. Comparing number applications between the most selective schools and schools with higher admissions stats is like comparing apples to oranges--and I say this as a parent who has kids in both categories.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much money did that cost?
A drop in the bucket compared to the complete picture. Very short sighted when parents whine about this.
No, it's not short sighted it's being over the top and not able to use common sense to slice your list down to at least the top 8. No need to go crazy.
Anonymous wrote:We experienced the opposite. My DD applied to 9 schools and felt herself getting burned out by the ninth one. Dozens of supplementals, honor college essays, scholarship essays, etc to write. All on top of a busy schedule and heavy course load at school. Her essays towards the end weren't necessarily worse than her earlier ones, but it wasn't like she was suddenly so much better or much more inspired to write them. She was tired out by the process and was feeling overwhelmed by the amount of money necessary for the whole process (sending test scores, CSS, application fees, etc.) and was frankly more than ready to be done.
Anonymous wrote:Just curious, what top school doesn't have an application fee? I think some Catholic colleges suspend the fee if you are coming from a Catholic high school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My dd has done 7 applications (2 more shortly) and other than paying the application fee, I had nothing to do with them. Never even read them... it's her thing.
+1 = if you want to go to college get yourself in.
Anonymous wrote:How much money did that cost??