Anonymous wrote:Absolutely. A 2310 from coal country would waltz right in. Not my kid though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:a kid on my street with 4.2 gpa 1400+ sat and on football team didn't get in. is this due to NOVA penalty?
I also know a kid with similar stats that was admitted as a freshman last year to a highly selective college. When I last spoke to his dad, he was failing his first semester at school. Being an athlete is tough for sure, but I also know that this kid had a relatively easy schedule in high school that led to a very high GPA. Now, clearly he's no dunce, he did pretty well on the SAT. But a 4.2 is not all the same across the board.
Even in a very competitive HS? I have no idea whether he's a top ten or top twenty student, but what else must UVA want? Some kind of a hook?
When you have over 33,000 apps for a class of 9,000, a hook would definitely help.
What's that - 30% admit rate? Doesn't seem that difficult to get in for a top student.
It's that high because the UVA applicants self-select and are determined by local public high schools. There is no way my local high school (FCPS) would have encouraged/let my daughter apply to UVA. The school, the counselor and the high school teacher letters went in for only the very top students (who were also applying to Ivies and other top publics). Your VA high school admissions won't support the B+ application to UVA. But they would support any other private or state applications so long as we, the parents, wanted to spend the application dollar. Go look at the stats on college confidential. The records (GPA, AP course, class ranking, scores, extra-curriculars) of the REJECTED VA, OOS and international kids is astonishing. I watched the internationals play "chance me" on the day the EAs were decided. I was amazed DC got in (4.2, ACT 36, good but not 800 SAT subject matter II tests, xlnt letters). It's really that difficult. Her other schools were Ivies and top publics. Her friends that got into Ivies did not get into UVA. They want well-rounded students with xlnt scores from all over the state. It is true if you are applying from one of the western most counties in VA your chances of getting in are much greater (there are some counties with only one or zero students attending) but from NOVA it is just about impossible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:a kid on my street with 4.2 gpa 1400+ sat and on football team didn't get in. is this due to NOVA penalty?
I also know a kid with similar stats that was admitted as a freshman last year to a highly selective college. When I last spoke to his dad, he was failing his first semester at school. Being an athlete is tough for sure, but I also know that this kid had a relatively easy schedule in high school that led to a very high GPA. Now, clearly he's no dunce, he did pretty well on the SAT. But a 4.2 is not all the same across the board.
Even in a very competitive HS? I have no idea whether he's a top ten or top twenty student, but what else must UVA want? Some kind of a hook?
When you have over 33,000 apps for a class of 9,000, a hook would definitely help.
What's that - 30% admit rate? Doesn't seem that difficult to get in for a top student.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:a kid on my street with 4.2 gpa 1400+ sat and on football team didn't get in. is this due to NOVA penalty?
I also know a kid with similar stats that was admitted as a freshman last year to a highly selective college. When I last spoke to his dad, he was failing his first semester at school. Being an athlete is tough for sure, but I also know that this kid had a relatively easy schedule in high school that led to a very high GPA. Now, clearly he's no dunce, he did pretty well on the SAT. But a 4.2 is not all the same across the board.
Even in a very competitive HS? I have no idea whether he's a top ten or top twenty student, but what else must UVA want? Some kind of a hook?
When you have over 33,000 apps for a class of 9,000, a hook would definitely help.
Anonymous wrote:UVA needs a critical mass of high achieving kids. The key place for getting that critical mass is nova. But the competition from nova is unreal. I thought 20 years ago it was tough, in terms of getting in, but wow, how easy it was back then, relatively speaking!
Anonymous wrote:Better to be an outstanding student at a lower performing high school with less competition. Tried to tell my relativse in NOVA this and have them move to a lower performing part of the state, since they are retired now, because their daughter could be top of her class there. Not here. Wish my parents had understood!
Anonymous wrote:This is interesting:
http://uvaapplication.blogspot.com/2016/10/uva-admission-quotas-for-northern.html
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Quotas by high school not county. Better to be in a lesser H S.
Better to be in a mediocre-plus high school.
It is by region, not by individual HS. It has been this way for a number of years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:a kid on my street with 4.2 gpa 1400+ sat and on football team didn't get in. is this due to NOVA penalty?
I also know a kid with similar stats that was admitted as a freshman last year to a highly selective college. When I last spoke to his dad, he was failing his first semester at school. Being an athlete is tough for sure, but I also know that this kid had a relatively easy schedule in high school that led to a very high GPA. Now, clearly he's no dunce, he did pretty well on the SAT. But a 4.2 is not all the same across the board.
Even in a very competitive HS? I have no idea whether he's a top ten or top twenty student, but what else must UVA want? Some kind of a hook?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:a kid on my street with 4.2 gpa 1400+ sat and on football team didn't get in. is this due to NOVA penalty?
I also know a kid with similar stats that was admitted as a freshman last year to a highly selective college. When I last spoke to his dad, he was failing his first semester at school. Being an athlete is tough for sure, but I also know that this kid had a relatively easy schedule in high school that led to a very high GPA. Now, clearly he's no dunce, he did pretty well on the SAT. But a 4.2 is not all the same across the board.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Better to be an outstanding student at a lower performing high school with less competition. Tried to tell my relativse in NOVA this and have them move to a lower performing part of the state, since they are retired now, because their daughter could be top of her class there. Not here. Wish my parents had understood!
I'll never understand parents who try to "game" the system by moving to a lower performing school. Will your kid stand out? Yes. But its short-sighted. Your kids college destination is the not the end game. If youre trying to raise motivated, life long learners, you don't purposely place them in a less challenging environment.