Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This post, with its mix of pseudo-nonchalance and type a worry, cracks me up.
Non-chalance stems from the fact that our state school is strong in child's area of interest. If I lived in another state or if my daughter wanted to study another subject, I would be less relaxed.
But have you checked stats to see if your DC has the record to get in?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This post, with its mix of pseudo-nonchalance and type a worry, cracks me up.
Love you. OP is on track to be that parent on the tours.
I probably would be "that parent", which is why I send the daughter on her own.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:College advisor told us some colleges track whether you open their emails and if you click the links too.That said, we saved most college visits for after acceptances. Cheaper to apply then travel a distance to ones that don't offer a spot in the end.
How do they track whether you open an email? Short of asking you to send a "read receipt", they can't know whether you open email, can they?
They can track everything. I work in marketing and can tell who opens, when, and what they click on. That’s basic technology these days. I can do a lot more than that too.
Uh oh, I’ve told my kids to never click on links in an email for security sake.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:College advisor told us some colleges track whether you open their emails and if you click the links too.That said, we saved most college visits for after acceptances. Cheaper to apply then travel a distance to ones that don't offer a spot in the end.
How do they track whether you open an email? Short of asking you to send a "read receipt", they can't know whether you open email, can they?
They can track everything. I work in marketing and can tell who opens, when, and what they click on. That’s basic technology these days. I can do a lot more than that too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can see in the common data set whether demonstrated interest is considered for a given college. For some SLACs it is.
Ok thanks! Nah, no SLACs here. Old fashioned comp sci or engineering, maybe premed (mother can hope right?). Technical magnet HS, girl, strong grades. No legacy, not URM. Has a shot, nowhere close to a guarantee. We'll see.
I am not losing sleep over that 70K yet. I would hate to find out down the road that some school did not admit her because we did not register for a tour, though.
You have a lot to learn. Many top SLACs have well respected engineering and computer science, and stellar pre-med programs. Pick one to visit on your vacation. You may be pleasantly surprised.
Harvey Mudd?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This post, with its mix of pseudo-nonchalance and type a worry, cracks me up.
Non-chalance stems from the fact that our state school is strong in child's area of interest. If I lived in another state or if my daughter wanted to study another subject, I would be less relaxed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:College advisor told us some colleges track whether you open their emails and if you click the links too.That said, we saved most college visits for after acceptances. Cheaper to apply then travel a distance to ones that don't offer a spot in the end.
How do they track whether you open an email? Short of asking you to send a "read receipt", they can't know whether you open email, can they?
They can track everything. I work in marketing and can tell who opens, when, and what they click on. That’s basic technology these days. I can do a lot more than that too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:College advisor told us some colleges track whether you open their emails and if you click the links too.That said, we saved most college visits for after acceptances. Cheaper to apply then travel a distance to ones that don't offer a spot in the end.
How do they track whether you open an email? Short of asking you to send a "read receipt", they can't know whether you open email, can they?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This post, with its mix of pseudo-nonchalance and type a worry, cracks me up.
Love you. OP is on track to be that parent on the tours.
Anonymous wrote:This post, with its mix of pseudo-nonchalance and type a worry, cracks me up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can see in the common data set whether demonstrated interest is considered for a given college. For some SLACs it is.
Ok thanks! Nah, no SLACs here. Old fashioned comp sci or engineering, maybe premed (mother can hope right?). Technical magnet HS, girl, strong grades. No legacy, not URM. Has a shot, nowhere close to a guarantee. We'll see.
I am not losing sleep over that 70K yet. I would hate to find out down the road that some school did not admit her because we did not register for a tour, though.
You have a lot to learn. Many top SLACs have well respected engineering and computer science, and stellar pre-med programs. Pick one to visit on your vacation. You may be pleasantly surprised.
Harvey Mudd?
Anonymous wrote:This post, with its mix of pseudo-nonchalance and type a worry, cracks me up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can see in the common data set whether demonstrated interest is considered for a given college. For some SLACs it is.
Ok thanks! Nah, no SLACs here. Old fashioned comp sci or engineering, maybe premed (mother can hope right?). Technical magnet HS, girl, strong grades. No legacy, not URM. Has a shot, nowhere close to a guarantee. We'll see.
I am not losing sleep over that 70K yet. I would hate to find out down the road that some school did not admit her because we did not register for a tour, though.
You have a lot to learn. Many top SLACs have well respected engineering and computer science, and stellar pre-med programs. Pick one to visit on your vacation. You may be pleasantly surprised.