Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I hate to say this but at that level, your race matters a LOT. Whether you like it or not, that's how the game is played. My Asian kid with similar stats and over 1000 hours of volunteer hours got rejected by almost all of the top schools.
probably because your child had poor essays
Lackluster/poor essays are a huge reason for why so many get denied. It's not the stats and it's not the ECs which make or break the app, it's the impression you create on the admissions officer such that they can support you
If you play the cards to their advantage, you'll get in. If you don't, it doesn't matter what you did, what scores you got, etc.
I'm a new poster. What do you know about this child's essay for you to presume that? If he has perfect grades & test scores, he's probably a decent writer as well and certainly a hard worker who would have put in a lot of effort on his essay, I would think. My dc is not a great writer and will probably not have good essays for college but you can also see that in his grades, which always have lower humanities grades. He just really struggles in English & History classes where there are a lot of papers & essays. This kid obviously didn't. And really, you think a kid with perfect grades & test scores just slopped together some mediocre college essay after working so hard all his life in school? Does that really seem likely to you? We all know at the top schools, it's a lottery. Instead of having a little sympathy for a family whose kid obviously worked so hard all his life, why do you immediately accuse him of submitting a poor essay? Like you know anything about him, his essay or the admissions process...
A kid with no life outside of schoolwork may not have interesting things to write about. Essays should show passion and personality. All top scorers are not necessarily great at creative writing.
Anonymous wrote:This is not a fact in any way. With his scores and grades, HYPSM will ALL keep him on the list for a long time. Eventually, they are only going to take about 5% of the kids who are grinds but THEY do take grinds, just not at a rate better than random. Since he has nothing that will knock him off or get him in, eventually, they will draw the names of a few like him from a hat. Seriously, they need a share of grinds to keep their score and GPA averages as high as possible while getting the others you list.
"A kid with just numbers and no other EC hook is not going to get into HYPSM unless they're a URM, recruited athlete or legacy. That's not racism, that's the facts."
My (white) child with almost identical stats and non-amazing ECs got into Rice, WashU, and Berkeley last year during the RD round, along with some top 10 SLACs. Based on her friends' results, agree that Chicago, Duke, and Northwestern are possibilities if he applies ED. As others have mentioned, Vandy, USC and Hopkins like high stats kids too, and MCGill is great for those who truly don't have much in the way of ECs. Consider Michigan and Cornell as well.
Anonymous
Post 10/28/2017 13:04 Subject: Top schools for kids with perfect scores but minimal ECs?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I hate to say this but at that level, your race matters a LOT. Whether you like it or not, that's how the game is played. My Asian kid with similar stats and over 1000 hours of volunteer hours got rejected by almost all of the top schools.
probably because your child had poor essays
Lackluster/poor essays are a huge reason for why so many get denied. It's not the stats and it's not the ECs which make or break the app, it's the impression you create on the admissions officer such that they can support you
If you play the cards to their advantage, you'll get in. If you don't, it doesn't matter what you did, what scores you got, etc.
I'm a new poster. What do you know about this child's essay for you to presume that? If he has perfect grades & test scores, he's probably a decent writer as well and certainly a hard worker who would have put in a lot of effort on his essay, I would think. My dc is not a great writer and will probably not have good essays for college but you can also see that in his grades, which always have lower humanities grades. He just really struggles in English & History classes where there are a lot of papers & essays. This kid obviously didn't. And really, you think a kid with perfect grades & test scores just slopped together some mediocre college essay after working so hard all his life in school? Does that really seem likely to you? We all know at the top schools, it's a lottery. Instead of having a little sympathy for a family whose kid obviously worked so hard all his life, why do you immediately accuse him of submitting a poor essay? Like you know anything about him, his essay or the admissions process...
A kid with no life outside of schoolwork may not have interesting things to write about. Essays should show passion and personality. All top scorers are not necessarily great at creative writing.
Just because the kid doesn't participate in formal extracurricular activities doesn't mean he doesnt have a life.
Anonymous wrote:I said probably. I'm not presuming I know anything about the applicant, but for private schools where applicants are all the same stat wise, recommendations and essays play a huge role.
Most admission officers I know have said the majority of the essays they read are mediocre. So it could very well be the reason a high stats student gets denied from many top schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I hate to say this but at that level, your race matters a LOT. Whether you like it or not, that's how the game is played. My Asian kid with similar stats and over 1000 hours of volunteer hours got rejected by almost all of the top schools.
probably because your child had poor essays
Lackluster/poor essays are a huge reason for why so many get denied. It's not the stats and it's not the ECs which make or break the app, it's the impression you create on the admissions officer such that they can support you
If you play the cards to their advantage, you'll get in. If you don't, it doesn't matter what you did, what scores you got, etc.
I'm a new poster. What do you know about this child's essay for you to presume that? If he has perfect grades & test scores, he's probably a decent writer as well and certainly a hard worker who would have put in a lot of effort on his essay, I would think. My dc is not a great writer and will probably not have good essays for college but you can also see that in his grades, which always have lower humanities grades. He just really struggles in English & History classes where there are a lot of papers & essays. This kid obviously didn't. And really, you think a kid with perfect grades & test scores just slopped together some mediocre college essay after working so hard all his life in school? Does that really seem likely to you? We all know at the top schools, it's a lottery. Instead of having a little sympathy for a family whose kid obviously worked so hard all his life, why do you immediately accuse him of submitting a poor essay? Like you know anything about him, his essay or the admissions process...
A kid with no life outside of schoolwork may not have interesting things to write about. Essays should show passion and personality. All top scorers are not necessarily great at creative writing.
Anonymous wrote:This is not a fact in any way. With his scores and grades, HYPSM will ALL keep him on the list for a long time. Eventually, they are only going to take about 5% of the kids who are grinds but THEY do take grinds, just not at a rate better than random. Since he has nothing that will knock him off or get him in, eventually, they will draw the names of a few like him from a hat. Seriously, they need a share of grinds to keep their score and GPA averages as high as possible while getting the others you list.
"A kid with just numbers and no other EC hook is not going to get into HYPSM unless they're a URM, recruited athlete or legacy. That's not racism, that's the facts."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I hate to say this but at that level, your race matters a LOT. Whether you like it or not, that's how the game is played. My Asian kid with similar stats and over 1000 hours of volunteer hours got rejected by almost all of the top schools.
probably because your child had poor essays
Lackluster/poor essays are a huge reason for why so many get denied. It's not the stats and it's not the ECs which make or break the app, it's the impression you create on the admissions officer such that they can support you
If you play the cards to their advantage, you'll get in. If you don't, it doesn't matter what you did, what scores you got, etc.
No, not that. His essays were fine but I realize it's easy to sit here and speculate.
It's also easy to sit here and cry racism instead of understanding that other kids had spectacular essays and extracurriculars that brought their applications to the top.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I hate to say this but at that level, your race matters a LOT. Whether you like it or not, that's how the game is played. My Asian kid with similar stats and over 1000 hours of volunteer hours got rejected by almost all of the top schools.
probably because your child had poor essays
Lackluster/poor essays are a huge reason for why so many get denied. It's not the stats and it's not the ECs which make or break the app, it's the impression you create on the admissions officer such that they can support you
If you play the cards to their advantage, you'll get in. If you don't, it doesn't matter what you did, what scores you got, etc.
I'm a new poster. What do you know about this child's essay for you to presume that? If he has perfect grades & test scores, he's probably a decent writer as well and certainly a hard worker who would have put in a lot of effort on his essay, I would think. My dc is not a great writer and will probably not have good essays for college but you can also see that in his grades, which always have lower humanities grades. He just really struggles in English & History classes where there are a lot of papers & essays. This kid obviously didn't. And really, you think a kid with perfect grades & test scores just slopped together some mediocre college essay after working so hard all his life in school? Does that really seem likely to you? We all know at the top schools, it's a lottery. Instead of having a little sympathy for a family whose kid obviously worked so hard all his life, why do you immediately accuse him of submitting a poor essay? Like you know anything about him, his essay or the admissions process...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I hate to say this but at that level, your race matters a LOT. Whether you like it or not, that's how the game is played. My Asian kid with similar stats and over 1000 hours of volunteer hours got rejected by almost all of the top schools.
probably because your child had poor essays
Lackluster/poor essays are a huge reason for why so many get denied. It's not the stats and it's not the ECs which make or break the app, it's the impression you create on the admissions officer such that they can support you
If you play the cards to their advantage, you'll get in. If you don't, it doesn't matter what you did, what scores you got, etc.