Anonymous wrote:FAFSA points out that working during a gap year may impact your financial aid. https://twitter.com/FAFSA/status/1278724118427447298/photo/1
Anonymous wrote:Are there any Stats available about the percentage of rising college freshman requesting gap years this year?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do GAP year. Next year the class of 2020 Gap year kids will be starting, taking spots from the 2021 kids. Ergo 2021-2022 is a great year to take a gap year.
Except there are going to be 2022 grads, too.
Anonymous wrote:I think schools will be harder on 2021 kids who apply with the class of 2022. They will have to do something exceptional in their gap year to prove that they weren't trying to game the system by avoiding the slots taken by the class of 2020 who deferred. For 2020 kids, when they applied to colleges, and (most often) accepted at a school, they had no idea what would happen. That isn't true with the class of 2021. Top colleges will definitely consider this since applications will be even more "holistic" for the next two years -- at least.
Anonymous wrote:Gap year doing what? Can’t travel. Can’t get any job except homeschooling little kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My super smart 24 year old was going to apply to grad school for fall 2021 entry but realized in early April that applications would be down and he should shoot for starting this fall. He finished his application in two days and got into a top ten program with a ton of merit aid. Schools are begging kids to enroll right now. May be a missed opportunity to wait a year.
Good for him!
I just can't see waiting to apply. If it means doing on-line classes to hold my kid's place at the university when it opens, I will pay for that. My kid is aiming at University of Chicago, Yale, Cornell and Penn. If he gets accepted to one of those, I will pay for on-line classes to make sure he has a place when campus re-opens. It's not ideal, but nothing is ideal right now.
If a student is accepted for a gap year, they do not reapply...they simply join the following class and matriculate a year later.
How prevalent are these requests for gap years ? Most recent HS class of 2020 that I know are matriculating as planned in spite of the remote learning. I am only aware of a very few taking gap year and for some of those, they had always planned for it, even before the pandemic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My super smart 24 year old was going to apply to grad school for fall 2021 entry but realized in early April that applications would be down and he should shoot for starting this fall. He finished his application in two days and got into a top ten program with a ton of merit aid. Schools are begging kids to enroll right now. May be a missed opportunity to wait a year.
Good for him!
I just can't see waiting to apply. If it means doing on-line classes to hold my kid's place at the university when it opens, I will pay for that. My kid is aiming at University of Chicago, Yale, Cornell and Penn. If he gets accepted to one of those, I will pay for on-line classes to make sure he has a place when campus re-opens. It's not ideal, but nothing is ideal right now.
Anonymous wrote:My super smart 24 year old was going to apply to grad school for fall 2021 entry but realized in early April that applications would be down and he should shoot for starting this fall. He finished his application in two days and got into a top ten program with a ton of merit aid. Schools are begging kids to enroll right now. May be a missed opportunity to wait a year.