Anonymous wrote:RE is NYC level money and they all qualify as URM. Pretty much the top of the college admissions heap.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Take a look at Ransom Everglades' (Coconut Groove/Miami) Class of 2025 matriculation:
- from the HOS email: "Thirty-three RE students (more than 20 percent of the class) are heading to Ivy League schools, MIT or Stanford."
https://ransomeverglades.myschoolapp.com/ftpimages/748/download/download_10894750.pdf
This one is much more impressive.
This is quite possibly the best college placement I've seen of ANY private school in the US this year:
https://www.instagram.com/ransomseniors/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Take a look at Ransom Everglades' (Coconut Groove/Miami) Class of 2025 matriculation:
- from the HOS email: "Thirty-three RE students (more than 20 percent of the class) are heading to Ivy League schools, MIT or Stanford."
https://ransomeverglades.myschoolapp.com/ftpimages/748/download/download_10894750.pdf
This one is much more impressive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is common at the top NYC high schools. Check out the Insta accounts for the classes of 2025 at Trinity, Brearley, Collegiate, Dalton, Horace Mann… Impressive placement %s at Stuy too. I heard 60 (in a class of about 750) admitted at Cornell, 15 Yale etc.
NYC kids have amazing ECs because of access to top hospitals, Wall St, tech, law firms, Broadway, fashion, Lincoln Ctr & Carnegie for music and dance. You name it. I know of kids interning/working with Nobel laureates, Olympic gold medalists, Tony & Oscar winning directors who all live on NYC.
I just looked at the Spence25 Insta account and holy smokes, it’s very impressive! 6 Harvard, a couple each at Yale, Stanford MIT, Penn, Cornell, Chicago etc. It’s a small school, I read 55-60 girls per class. And it’s not even considered the strongest amongst the NYC privates.
Anonymous wrote:This is common at the top NYC high schools. Check out the Insta accounts for the classes of 2025 at Trinity, Brearley, Collegiate, Dalton, Horace Mann… Impressive placement %s at Stuy too. I heard 60 (in a class of about 750) admitted at Cornell, 15 Yale etc.
NYC kids have amazing ECs because of access to top hospitals, Wall St, tech, law firms, Broadway, fashion, Lincoln Ctr & Carnegie for music and dance. You name it. I know of kids interning/working with Nobel laureates, Olympic gold medalists, Tony & Oscar winning directors who all live on NYC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is common at the top NYC high schools. Check out the Insta accounts for the classes of 2025 at Trinity, Brearley, Collegiate, Dalton, Horace Mann… Impressive placement %s at Stuy too. I heard 60 (in a class of about 750) admitted at Cornell, 15 Yale etc.
NYC kids have amazing ECs because of access to top hospitals, Wall St, tech, law firms, Broadway, fashion, Lincoln Ctr & Carnegie for music and dance. You name it. I know of kids interning/working with Nobel laureates, Olympic gold medalists, Tony & Oscar winning directors who all live on NYC.
NYC kids also have lots of parents who either went to these schools or can donate a small fortune to these schools. As impressive as they are, the average school for most of them is worse than the average school for the parents. Lots of Harvard/Yale couples sending their kid to Cornell (so doing worse than the parents) or kid got into Harvard/Yale because of the legacy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is common at the top NYC high schools. Check out the Insta accounts for the classes of 2025 at Trinity, Brearley, Collegiate, Dalton, Horace Mann… Impressive placement %s at Stuy too. I heard 60 (in a class of about 750) admitted at Cornell, 15 Yale etc.
NYC kids have amazing ECs because of access to top hospitals, Wall St, tech, law firms, Broadway, fashion, Lincoln Ctr & Carnegie for music and dance. You name it. I know of kids interning/working with Nobel laureates, Olympic gold medalists, Tony & Oscar winning directors who all live on NYC.
NYC kids also have lots of parents who either went to these schools or can donate a small fortune to these schools. As impressive as they are, the average school for most of them is worse than the average school for the parents. Lots of Harvard/Yale couples sending their kid to Cornell (so doing worse than the parents) or kid got into Harvard/Yale because of the legacy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is common at the top NYC high schools. Check out the Insta accounts for the classes of 2025 at Trinity, Brearley, Collegiate, Dalton, Horace Mann… Impressive placement %s at Stuy too. I heard 60 (in a class of about 750) admitted at Cornell, 15 Yale etc.
NYC kids have amazing ECs because of access to top hospitals, Wall St, tech, law firms, Broadway, fashion, Lincoln Ctr & Carnegie for music and dance. You name it. I know of kids interning/working with Nobel laureates, Olympic gold medalists, Tony & Oscar winning directors who all live on NYC.
NYC kids also have lots of parents who either went to these schools or can donate a small fortune to these schools. As impressive as they are, the average school for most of them is worse than the average school for the parents. Lots of Harvard/Yale couples sending their kid to Cornell (so doing worse than the parents) or kid got into Harvard/Yale because of the legacy.
Anonymous wrote:This is common at the top NYC high schools. Check out the Insta accounts for the classes of 2025 at Trinity, Brearley, Collegiate, Dalton, Horace Mann… Impressive placement %s at Stuy too. I heard 60 (in a class of about 750) admitted at Cornell, 15 Yale etc.
NYC kids have amazing ECs because of access to top hospitals, Wall St, tech, law firms, Broadway, fashion, Lincoln Ctr & Carnegie for music and dance. You name it. I know of kids interning/working with Nobel laureates, Olympic gold medalists, Tony & Oscar winning directors who all live on NYC.