Anonymous wrote:Yes. It’s a distinction that really matters to some people who are gatekeepers (employers, grad admissions) and may matter more in an era when there’s lots of grade inflation so GPA isn’t always a useful metric for distinguishing among students.
Is it really $95 to accept (vs buy the key)? I did the former but not the latter. Only membership benefit I’ve used is putting it on my CV. True of DH as well.

Anonymous wrote:I was in it. Entry requirements may vary from institution to institution, but at least my college, all PBK really signified was that I got good grades across a relatively wide range of courses--something that was readily apparent in my transcripts already. PBK membership isn't an achievement in-and-of-itself, it is simply recognition of prior achievements. By all means if she wants to join and has $95 to spare she should go for it (and be proud of her awesome grades!) and she can list it under "Awards and Honors" in a CV or resume. That’s what I did, but I’m not positive it added anything to my CV that my Latin honors, GPA, and the classes/grades on my transcript didn’t.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, it is $95. It is not a significant amount of money. NP here
You sound very sheltered.
You sound very naive. If you know anything about the cost of this kind of thing on college campuses today, $95 is nothing.
NP. It is a legitimate question. My kid gets invitations for things like this all the time. Psi Chi. National Society of Collegiate Scholars. Phi Kappa Phi. Golden Key Honor Society. Order of Omega. The list goes on. Sure, $95 may not be a significant amount of money in the grand scheme of things, but we’re not going to throw $95 at every last organization that wants to flatter her. It is helpful to know what is and isn’t “worth it”, what is actually something that is legitimately impressive/valued to have on a resume for a workplace or grad school and what just screams “I’m a sucker.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, it is $95. It is not a significant amount of money. NP here
You sound very sheltered.
You sound very naive. If you know anything about the cost of this kind of thing on college campuses today, $95 is nothing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, it is $95. It is not a significant amount of money. NP here
You sound very sheltered.
You sound very naive. If you know anything about the cost of this kind of thing on college campuses today, $95 is nothing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, it is $95. It is not a significant amount of money. NP here
You sound very sheltered.