Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Previous posters stated 10 SFS students were accepted early at Yale. How many were recruited for sorts teams or other specific talents? Ten students seems like an unusually high number these days coming from any day school unless something else is at play (14 would be about one percent of the freshman class). Thanks.
None were athletic recruits. My child was one of the accepted, so I know from my child all the kids accepted. This senior class had 23 or 24 kids accepted at Ivies for just the early round, plus a few at Stanford, Chicago, Duke and other top schools. But I think this class is unusual. Certainly the parents all were shocked at the acceptance numbers from Yale and Penn. Wouldn't expect any regular decisions to those schools though. That's a lot for one school, and there are so many good schools just in this area. FWIW, no Penn accepted students were athletic recruits either.
20% of the class accepted at Ivies for Early Decision is good, but not unheard of for this area (there are several other schools that not infrequently will hit the 20% mark for Ivy ED). The fact that 10 students are going to Yale is pretty amazing, though. Congrats to the kids, Sidwell has a long and excellent history at Yale and it's obviously continuing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I believe 3 of the Yale admits were legacy, 4 were legacy, leaving 3 with neither connection
This is something that I always wonder about in admissions. Did any of the students have parents of some exceptional or notable professional stature, that could be seen to benefit a university's community? Perhaps a very accomplished government official, or a respected academic, or a well-known media figure?
Anonymous wrote: The information is relevant to this thread because if it is not explored the implication is that SFS -- as an institution -- has done something beyond its peer schools to land 10 acceptances. If that is true, it is relevant to know what it has done to achieve this -- better academics, better athletic coaching, better recruiting of stronger students of particular backgrounds, or all of the above. An alternative hypothesis is that SFS has done nothing beyond its peer schools and this was a fluke. There may be other hypotheses. An assumption in this thread is that the schools are relevant to the college exmissions. If that is not true, then the thread has no meaning. If that is true -- but the cause of the successes is not explored -- the thread has no meaning beyond a list of statistics. Again, H/Y/P/S are generally quite direct that they have too many qualified applicants for slots, so other factors beyond basic qualifications are necessarily part of the admissions process. If people don't want these things explored on DCUM, then there is no reason to post the numbers of admissions to given schools from certain schools on DCUM other than misguided,blind exuberance.
Where are students getting Early Decision (or EA) admissions in your independent school? How are admissions to the Ivy League, Stanford, Amherst, etc.? Is the class of 2015 shaping up so far to be better, on par, or worse than last year's results?
Anonymous wrote: The information is relevant to this thread because if it is not explored the implication is that SFS -- as an institution -- has done something beyond its peer schools to land 10 acceptances. If that is true, it is relevant to know what it has done to achieve this -- better academics, better athletic coaching, better recruiting of stronger students of particular backgrounds, or all of the above. An alternative hypothesis is that SFS has done nothing beyond its peer schools and this was a fluke. There may be other hypotheses. An assumption in this thread is that the schools are relevant to the college exmissions. If that is not true, then the thread has no meaning. If that is true -- but the cause of the successes is not explored -- the thread has no meaning beyond a list of statistics. Again, H/Y/P/S are generally quite direct that they have too many qualified applicants for slots, so other factors beyond basic qualifications are necessarily part of the admissions process. If people don't want these things explored on DCUM, then there is no reason to post the numbers of admissions to given schools from certain schools on DCUM other than misguided,blind exuberance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All of the information that people are looking for is available directly from Yale. The majority of students they admit are non-URM, non-athletic recruits who are not legacies. Something like 65-70% are not hooked. That is a fact. People just don't want to hear the message that they were denied on their own merits or due to a highly idiosyncratic process. Further, any attempt to project reasons or advantages onto a sample as small as 10 students is spurious. In other words, the is no information of any value derived from speculating about this group, especially without any knowledge of academic qualifications of the students.
No one is speculating about this group of students, beyond the initial factual observation that 10 admits from one class this size seems unusual. Parents have a legitimate interest in understanding this - parents at SFS, potential applicants, and parents of children in other schools. If 10 kids won an Intel price in one class that would be a fair question. If 10 kids dropped out senior year that would be a fair question. A further reasonable question was raised regarding the role of privates in locating qualified URM students in general. Your post is the only attack in this sequence.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All of the information that people are looking for is available directly from Yale. The majority of students they admit are non-URM, non-athletic recruits who are not legacies. Something like 65-70% are not hooked. That is a fact. People just don't want to hear the message that they were denied on their own merits or due to a highly idiosyncratic process. Further, any attempt to project reasons or advantages onto a sample as small as 10 students is spurious. In other words, the is no information of any value derived from speculating about this group, especially without any knowledge of academic qualifications of the students.
No one is speculating about this group of students, beyond the initial factual observation that 10 admits from one class this size seems unusual. Parents have a legitimate interest in understanding this - parents at SFS, potential applicants, and parents of children in other schools. If 10 kids won an Intel price in one class that would be a fair question. If 10 kids dropped out senior year that would be a fair question. A further reasonable question was raised regarding the role of privates in locating qualified URM students in general. Your post is the only attack in this sequence.
Anonymous wrote:All of the information that people are looking for is available directly from Yale. The majority of students they admit are non-URM, non-athletic recruits who are not legacies. Something like 65-70% are not hooked. That is a fact. People just don't want to hear the message that they were denied on their own merits or due to a highly idiosyncratic process. Further, any attempt to project reasons or advantages onto a sample as small as 10 students is spurious. In other words, the is no information of any value derived from speculating about this group, especially without any knowledge of academic qualifications of the students.