Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - my son used the spot on his applications to talk about his medical issues. It worked out.
I'm sorry he struggled so much and glad he's doing so well right now.
Thank you. That is good to hear. He wrote on essay addressing the issues and another that avoided them. He is debating which to use. He is concerned with “making excuses.”
Anonymous wrote:U of Vermont, Pitt, if he brings his ACT up a bit. DD had a similar struggle, 30 act got her in at those 2
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - my son used the spot on his applications to talk about his medical issues. It worked out.
I'm sorry he struggled so much and glad he's doing so well right now.
Thank you. That is good to hear. He wrote on essay addressing the issues and another that avoided them. He is debating which to use. He is concerned with “making excuses.”
I don't know much, but I think the main essay should be about something else, and he can use the "special concerns" part for the excuses one.
Or, do a gap year and apply next fall with that shiny solid good year in place.
Anonymous wrote:OP, my son had some complications from mono freshman year and had grades more than a full point below his usual.
Granted, it is freshman year, not junior year, but the rest of my advice still holds.
There is a place on the common ap for describing special circumstances. One paragraph is the minimum and the maximum he should write to describe the health issues and their impact. If there is ever a time to help a kid with the application, this is it.
Also, make sure the counselor has the paragraph, or a similar one that is tailored for her so she can speak of it in the reference letter.
I'm sorry your kid had such a rough year.
As far as the main essay goes, I think he should talk about who he is more generally (and write a nice essay that doesn't hide the issue but doesn't focus on it either). Save the gpa defense for the spot where it belongs. He is more than his bad year.
If your kid is a 3.5 student for 2.5 out of 3.5 years (no one has the last semester), there will be room for some accomodation.
Anonymous wrote:Who forced the adhd meds on him junior year? Was it your idea because you thought he needed a boost to go to an Ivy?
Smart..
Anonymous wrote:This kid is in big trouble on the admissions front. All of the folks pushing VCU are clueless -- admissions is strictly numbers-based and with that record his chances are very slim. If I were the OP, I strongly consider the community college route.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:U of Vermont, Pitt, if he brings his ACT up a bit. DD had a similar struggle, 30 act got her in at those 2
There is no time to bring up the ACT. Kid is a senior and it is December.