Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Weird post.
Seriously. She wrote “boom” in the title!
I love how no thread is immune to the mean girls of DCUM.
NP. The boom part sounds like — or is — bragging. If the title of this thread were “Harvard Admission - Boom!” there’s no question that would be bragging. Not seeing how this is different.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Weird post.
Seriously. She wrote “boom” in the title!
I love how no thread is immune to the mean girls of DCUM.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Weird post.
Seriously. She wrote “boom” in the title!
Anonymous wrote:Mine did also but I’ve kept that secret for many years.
Anonymous wrote:Weird post.
Anonymous wrote:One lousy essay gets you a full scholarship, but years of hard work and toil don’t? Perhaps it’s not his essay but his accomplishments in other areas?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My average child just got a full-tuition scholarship. He wasn’t aiming for big or name schools but one that was a good fit. He got the scholarship based on an amazing essay that he wrote. I’m so proud of him. And I want to encourage everyone to chill out a little about “best” schools. His friends are worried they’ll fail life if they don’t go to an Ivy. Meanwhile, he’ll be graduating debt free.
How do you know this?
OP here. Because it was a scholarship based on a specific essay prompt. He'd already gotten into the college. This essay was scholarship specific. No mystery here.
Now, I am not sure if I believe you. One essay = full tuition for 4 years? I doubt that.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I realize your post is in an anonymous forum, but in real life I would not gloat about the scholarship. Some people will still think only a top tier school is worthwhile, notwithstanding your DC’s scholarship. Some people might be jealous, and some people might think you lack tact for bragging (especially about money matters). Best way is to be humble. Good luck to your DC in college.
— Mom of kid who also got a full tuition scholarship based on a scholarship application that involved writing essays