Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:SJC is a great school. It is easier than the small school list above but maybe harder than the Diocesan schools listed. It is about the same size as those schools though ~1,200 students. IMO it is becoming more sought after by many families. Great alternative to single sex schools. Great athletics. Also has some awesome niche programs- scholars, Benilde, cadets, entrepreneur, etc.
+1. I will also add the college counseling was excellent during the pandemic. My DD, who just graduated, was very prepared for the college application process. SJC held a essay writing course the summer between 11th and 12th grade. Her essay was complete by the fall. The college counselors walk the students through the common app so they are familiar with it in the summer before school starts. She had all her schools loaded into Naviance for the teacher recommendations to be sent. It all went so smoothly. SJC is a testing site for ACT and SAT and students get preferred spots. I felt like the college counseling was the icing on the cake. DD got into every school she applied to.
Where was she accepted?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:SJC is a great school. It is easier than the small school list above but maybe harder than the Diocesan schools listed. It is about the same size as those schools though ~1,200 students. IMO it is becoming more sought after by many families. Great alternative to single sex schools. Great athletics. Also has some awesome niche programs- scholars, Benilde, cadets, entrepreneur, etc.
+1. I will also add the college counseling was excellent during the pandemic. My DD, who just graduated, was very prepared for the college application process. SJC held a essay writing course the summer between 11th and 12th grade. Her essay was complete by the fall. The college counselors walk the students through the common app so they are familiar with it in the summer before school starts. She had all her schools loaded into Naviance for the teacher recommendations to be sent. It all went so smoothly. SJC is a testing site for ACT and SAT and students get preferred spots. I felt like the college counseling was the icing on the cake. DD got into every school she applied to.
Anonymous wrote:SJC is a great school. It is easier than the small school list above but maybe harder than the Diocesan schools listed. It is about the same size as those schools though ~1,200 students. IMO it is becoming more sought after by many families. Great alternative to single sex schools. Great athletics. Also has some awesome niche programs- scholars, Benilde, cadets, entrepreneur, etc.
Anonymous wrote:What about getting into SJC?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do most of the Catholic High Schools have waitlists this year?
Yes.
They pretty much always do since applications almost always exceed Admissions.
The length of the waitlist and the probability of being put on it and offered admission from it depend on the school.
Some Catholic schools are just harder to get accepted into.
Which ones are the hardest to get into?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does being Catholic help when applying to Gonzaga from a non-Catholic k-8? How high do the HSPT scores need to be?
Yes, being Catholic helps. And Gonzaga is fairly competitive. I would guess at least 85th percentile with a strong all around application (grades, essay, recommendations, extracurriculars).
Brother/father legacy is huge at Gonzaga. From our Catholic k-8 this year, 4 legacies (who would not have been admitted otherwise) and 2 w/ no hooks were admitted (all 6 boys will likely play a high school sport, none college level). The 2 boys without hooks were both very strong all around candidates with HSPTs 95+.
It is important to note that Gonzaga does not simply select students based on a high HSPT score, they value a diverse student body. Meaning there are students with a wide range of HSPT scores and grades. Admission is not solely based on academic achievement (it is not the “smart Catholic boy school”, despite some posters insisting the contrary), and teacher recommendations, essay, and interest from shadow day are all huge factors. A well rounded student body who will make an impact is the goal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do most of the Catholic High Schools have waitlists this year?
Yes.
They pretty much always do since applications almost always exceed Admissions.
The length of the waitlist and the probability of being put on it and offered admission from it depend on the school.
Some Catholic schools are just harder to get accepted into.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do most of the Catholic High Schools have waitlists this year?
Yes.
Anonymous wrote:Do most of the Catholic High Schools have waitlists this year?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid only applied to 2 Catholic HSs from Arlington public and got into both. One is notoriously hard to get into. He had straight As 6-8 grades, 98 HSPT score, good recs. We have zero connections- at church or school.
I knew nothing about the process prior.
What year was this?