Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The school in question is Duke. I just know a lot of cringey Duke alums and would hate for my kid to always have that hanging above them.
If this is Op and you’re upset that your kid may ED at Duke because it’s not a higher ranked school, then I think I can officially be done with DCUM forever. What a joke!
Anonymous wrote:Just tell us the school.
Anonymous wrote:I am OP and the school is not Duke! It is a small liberal arts college, ranked in the 40-50 range.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am OP and the school is not Duke! It is a small liberal arts college, ranked in the 40-50 range.
Forget the rankings after you get out of the top 20 or so schools which have name recognition, even though they don’t necessarily provide a better education. I think it becomes a wash from 20-80ish where kids need to go where they’re most likely to thrive. A top 40-50 liberal arts school can be a springboard to many successes in life.
Top 40 to 50 give little merit. Look at the top 10% - that is 386 or so institutions.
Anonymous wrote:I am not answering until you tell us the school.
Also I think you mostly care because you care what others think.
Anonymous wrote:DC (my oldest) has reached a point of having a pretty clear first choice and they want to apply there ED. Of the 10 or so colleges on DC’s list, I’d put it near the bottom if I were choosing for them. I have tried very hard to let this be DC’s choice without my influence, but am finding it harder now that DC seems to have settled on this as a top, potentially ED, choice. The college is “fine” and I don’t have an issue with DC applying, but I don’t think DC should limit themselves now to it by applying ED. My reasons admittedly relate to lack of perceived prestige but also because this college has less robust academic offerings, outplacement than some of DC’s other choices, and the peer group will likely not be as engaged and academic as DC is- I feel like DC has worked hard and is a great student and should “go for” something aligned with their academic achievements. I have tried to explain my concerns to DC, but they just view it as my criticizing their preferred choice and wanting to control the process. DC’s main reasons for the college becoming the top choice relate to a comfortable feeling that DC had when we visited, and they have a robust activity that is a little unusual that DC enjoys (not this one but think: varsity fencing team, vs just fencing clubs elsewhere). Any advice for me? Thank you in advance for please replying with polite advice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am OP and the school is not Duke! It is a small liberal arts college, ranked in the 40-50 range.
Is it necessary to ED to a SLAC ranked 40-50, just do RC and see if she changes her mind by then
DP: It is necessary; they only take about 1000 students and some of them fill more than half the class ED.
Wait so you’re both worried she is smarter than everyone there and also worried she won’t get in?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you live in the DMV and your kid goes to a competitive high school, you’ll be surprised at how difficult it is to be accepted anywhere. There is just so much competition in the area. I’m convinced my kid could have gotten into an elite college with his stars if we lived elsewhere because those kids are no smarter than the kids at top 100 schools. They just fit what the schools are looking for.
This is true. Everyone needs real safeties where their stats place them in the top 25%. They need to visit those schools and pick a handful they could be happy at. My son pooh pooped this, but he ended up at a safety.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well over 90% of kids go to local colleges, where their friend group, a bf or gf, and other kids from there high school tend to go.
Is that based on some actual date or are you just blowing smoke?