Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Neighbor's daughter didn't get in. . She's crushed.
She can try to transfer in.
You're right about going to NVCC, taking the right courses and maintaining the required GPA. The peculiar thing is that no one does it, at least in my own experience of watching two huge high school classes go thru the college app process. I have a DC at UVA right now. The program is a real smart move, especially if cost is an issue, but maintain the GPA at NVCC (remember these are college grades, not high school grading) is tough. Also, a lot of kids drop out of NVCC. Finally, my DC as a rising HS senior took a class at NVCC and the professor was beyond horrible. She was truly just phoning it in as an adjunct.
The other interesting fact I've learned from reading College Confidential is that regular transfers (coming in from somewhere other than NVCC) are placed behind the NVCC transfers. So apparently someone is coming in to UVA from NVCC but I don't know who. Those who are transferring in from say GMU or any private, go behind the NVCC applicants - so it's a lot easier to say one can transfer in than it really is.
Yup. The legacy transfers must wait behind the NVCC kids too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Neighbor's daughter didn't get in. . She's crushed.
She can try to transfer in.
You're right about going to NVCC, taking the right courses and maintaining the required GPA. The peculiar thing is that no one does it, at least in my own experience of watching two huge high school classes go thru the college app process. I have a DC at UVA right now. The program is a real smart move, especially if cost is an issue, but maintain the GPA at NVCC (remember these are college grades, not high school grading) is tough. Also, a lot of kids drop out of NVCC. Finally, my DC as a rising HS senior took a class at NVCC and the professor was beyond horrible. She was truly just phoning it in as an adjunct.
The other interesting fact I've learned from reading College Confidential is that regular transfers (coming in from somewhere other than NVCC) are placed behind the NVCC transfers. So apparently someone is coming in to UVA from NVCC but I don't know who. Those who are transferring in from say GMU or any private, go behind the NVCC applicants - so it's a lot easier to say one can transfer in than it really is.
Well, now you know who:
http://research.schev.edu/apps/info/CC_Feedback.Northern-Virginia-Community-College.ashx
2014-15 207 NVCC students transferred to UVA.
Thanks. I've never seen that before. I still don't know anyone's child who has done it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Neighbor's daughter didn't get in. . She's crushed.
She can try to transfer in.
You're right about going to NVCC, taking the right courses and maintaining the required GPA. The peculiar thing is that no one does it, at least in my own experience of watching two huge high school classes go thru the college app process. I have a DC at UVA right now. The program is a real smart move, especially if cost is an issue, but maintain the GPA at NVCC (remember these are college grades, not high school grading) is tough. Also, a lot of kids drop out of NVCC. Finally, my DC as a rising HS senior took a class at NVCC and the professor was beyond horrible. She was truly just phoning it in as an adjunct.
The other interesting fact I've learned from reading College Confidential is that regular transfers (coming in from somewhere other than NVCC) are placed behind the NVCC transfers. So apparently someone is coming in to UVA from NVCC but I don't know who. Those who are transferring in from say GMU or any private, go behind the NVCC applicants - so it's a lot easier to say one can transfer in than it really is.
Well, now you know who:
http://research.schev.edu/apps/info/CC_Feedback.Northern-Virginia-Community-College.ashx
2014-15 207 NVCC students transferred to UVA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The two that got in from our high school have similar profiles. Top 1 or 2 in class. One (not mine) had perfect SAT scores (255 in current class have perfect SATs), mine had a 35, then a 36 on the ACT. Both eagle scouts. GPAs in excess of 4.0. Both had taken the SAT subject matter II tests which I highly encourage. Universities will say "not required but highly encouraged" but they really want to see what you can do in a relevant subject on those SAT subject matter tests, especially if you are going into the Sciences. Both had finished Calculus BC. College confidential keeps repeating that UVA seems to seek out a well-rounded, kind sort of person. That has been my experience.
255 people in your kid's graduating class have perfect SAT scores? This can't be right.
I read this as 255 kids in the accepted class at UVA have perfect scores.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Neighbor's daughter didn't get in. . She's crushed.
She can try to transfer in.
You're right about going to NVCC, taking the right courses and maintaining the required GPA. The peculiar thing is that no one does it, at least in my own experience of watching two huge high school classes go thru the college app process. I have a DC at UVA right now. The program is a real smart move, especially if cost is an issue, but maintain the GPA at NVCC (remember these are college grades, not high school grading) is tough. Also, a lot of kids drop out of NVCC. Finally, my DC as a rising HS senior took a class at NVCC and the professor was beyond horrible. She was truly just phoning it in as an adjunct.
The other interesting fact I've learned from reading College Confidential is that regular transfers (coming in from somewhere other than NVCC) are placed behind the NVCC transfers. So apparently someone is coming in to UVA from NVCC but I don't know who. Those who are transferring in from say GMU or any private, go behind the NVCC applicants - so it's a lot easier to say one can transfer in than it really is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The two that got in from our high school have similar profiles. Top 1 or 2 in class. One (not mine) had perfect SAT scores (255 in current class have perfect SATs), mine had a 35, then a 36 on the ACT. Both eagle scouts. GPAs in excess of 4.0. Both had taken the SAT subject matter II tests which I highly encourage. Universities will say "not required but highly encouraged" but they really want to see what you can do in a relevant subject on those SAT subject matter tests, especially if you are going into the Sciences. Both had finished Calculus BC. College confidential keeps repeating that UVA seems to seek out a well-rounded, kind sort of person. That has been my experience.
255 people in your kid's graduating class have perfect SAT scores? This can't be right.
Anonymous wrote:The two that got in from our high school have similar profiles. Top 1 or 2 in class. One (not mine) had perfect SAT scores (255 in current class have perfect SATs), mine had a 35, then a 36 on the ACT. Both eagle scouts. GPAs in excess of 4.0. Both had taken the SAT subject matter II tests which I highly encourage. Universities will say "not required but highly encouraged" but they really want to see what you can do in a relevant subject on those SAT subject matter tests, especially if you are going into the Sciences. Both had finished Calculus BC. College confidential keeps repeating that UVA seems to seek out a well-rounded, kind sort of person. That has been my experience.
Anonymous wrote:The two that got in from our high school have similar profiles. Top 1 or 2 in class. One (not mine) had perfect SAT scores (255 in current class have perfect SATs), mine had a 35, then a 36 on the ACT. Both eagle scouts. GPAs in excess of 4.0. Both had taken the SAT subject matter II tests which I highly encourage. Universities will say "not required but highly encouraged" but they really want to see what you can do in a relevant subject on those SAT subject matter tests, especially if you are going into the Sciences. Both had finished Calculus BC. College confidential keeps repeating that UVA seems to seek out a well-rounded, kind sort of person. That has been my experience.
Anonymous wrote:Neighbor's daughter didn't get in. . She's crushed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Neighbor's daughter didn't get in. . She's crushed.
She can try to transfer in.
You're right about going to NVCC, taking the right courses and maintaining the required GPA. The peculiar thing is that no one does it, at least in my own experience of watching two huge high school classes go thru the college app process. I have a DC at UVA right now. The program is a real smart move, especially if cost is an issue, but maintain the GPA at NVCC (remember these are college grades, not high school grading) is tough. Also, a lot of kids drop out of NVCC. Finally, my DC as a rising HS senior took a class at NVCC and the professor was beyond horrible. She was truly just phoning it in as an adjunct.
The other interesting fact I've learned from reading College Confidential is that regular transfers (coming in from somewhere other than NVCC) are placed behind the NVCC transfers. So apparently someone is coming in to UVA from NVCC but I don't know who. Those who are transferring in from say GMU or any private, go behind the NVCC applicants - so it's a lot easier to say one can transfer in than it really is.
Oh yes they can. . These kids live on their cell phones. They know college results even before the parents do. They form "UVA 2021" groups. They share their information. The class has numerous chat rooms set up by various college names or aspirations. The moment something happens my DD gets a ping. Then after they get into a college and accept it, they created new chat rooms and facebook pages to welcome one another and make friends before they even show. The latter I think is healthy - the former, not so.