Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was surprised how mean and judgmental people can be about other people’s kids. Adult snark is one thing, mocking teenagers quite another. Regardless of the anonymous nature of this forum, I don’t understand why anyone feels the need to belittle a high schooler’s character, intellect, or choice of ECs, college, major, etc.
I admit anonymously to being overly harsh about a few kids who appear to have waltzed into tippy top schools to play sports but have not done anything close to the academic work my kid and friends have done (many of whom are still waiting for decisions).
Until I had a kid with tippy top athletic ability and saw the amount of work that goes into "waltzing" into any school . . .
Anonymous wrote:Applying from an over-represented state puts you at a huge disadvantage.
Anonymous wrote:Taking into account all the discounting, most colleges cost the same. At least that is our experience.
Anonymous wrote:IB kids did worse comparatively. At the end of the year when other kids were done, they felt completely blindsided since they did worse in adimissions. Then they still had to deal with their IB Exams. It was disheartening to witness.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m surprised that DH is surprised by DC’s results.
DC is a prospective engineering student with great grades and test scores - just like the bulk of their magnet peers. Results are rejections (at a few highly ranked schools) and acceptances with lots of merit everywhere else. They have lots of good choices at schools they’re interested in, all for roughly the same price as in-state public.
Kid seems fine with it, and it’s what I expected, but DH just can’t believe it.
Did DH over or underestimate?
He thought DC should get into the ultra competitive schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m surprised that DH is surprised by DC’s results.
DC is a prospective engineering student with great grades and test scores - just like the bulk of their magnet peers. Results are rejections (at a few highly ranked schools) and acceptances with lots of merit everywhere else. They have lots of good choices at schools they’re interested in, all for roughly the same price as in-state public.
Kid seems fine with it, and it’s what I expected, but DH just can’t believe it.
Did DH over or underestimate?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But which school that accepts more than 50% of students is likely to be a great fit for a kid with perfect GPA and scores?
The sad fact is that posting about a school that satisfies this (and I have one in mind), would only prompt the jackasses on DCUM to savage it. But my 1560, 4.0 UW, NMF student from a well-known private school is in to a college that has a 48% admit rate, where she received a generous scholarship, and where she would have absolutely loved to go. It has one of the highest graduate school placement ratios, and is known for stellar undergraduate teaching. If none of her other schools had worked out, she would have loved going there.
I'm sympathetic to the "true likelies that are still desirable are hard to find" concerns, but the schools are out there.
Hendrix, Rhodes, Rose-Hulman
Anonymous wrote:What surprised me is that my dd had better stats as other kids who got into T-20 schools. The only difference they had more reputable stem awards. Even though they are not pursuing stem majors. Actually quite a few of them had lower standardized scores. I guess these top schools like these kind of ec, and it makes it easier for counselor to write the rec as further validation.
Anonymous wrote:I’m surprised that DH is surprised by DC’s results.
DC is a prospective engineering student with great grades and test scores - just like the bulk of their magnet peers. Results are rejections (at a few highly ranked schools) and acceptances with lots of merit everywhere else. They have lots of good choices at schools they’re interested in, all for roughly the same price as in-state public.
Kid seems fine with it, and it’s what I expected, but DH just can’t believe it.