Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yawn, all kids from rich suburban high schools
Not really, most states are represented so there's a good chance the scholars from Kansas, Montana, etc. aren't rich
The high schools represented in those states are the richest ones in those states.
I saw a kid on the list who is in my nephew’s class at their public high school. The school, in a “flyover” state, is under 2% low-income students.
That’s fair, oftentimes having the time to actually do a lot of service is a product of wealth anyways. It’s weird the scholarship is rewarding those that help others instead of rewarding the people who are usually recipients of help and need the scholarship $$ more. It’s definitely a strategy for coca-cola to increase their PR and build connections with future top leaders and scholars who might view coca-cola favorably regardless of their actions in the future
Anonymous wrote:My dd went her year + went to Princeton. It was a wonderful opportunity. She has met people from all over the country from the program-- all types,- rich, MC and poor, urban, rural, black, white, hispanic, private school, public school, homeschool. The application had a lot of categories to check. We are very grateful!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Those are the top schools for winners? They must be top students, what does it take to win?
They basically pick 150 of the best all-around students in the country, similar to what USA Today used to do with All-Academic Teams in the country. This year there were 91,000+ applicants to get the final 150 winners - an acceptance rate of 0.15%.
The year my son competed they picked almost exclusively students of color.
Provide the year so I can verify.
+1 the girl I know who won and who’s going to Duke next year is white. The girl from DC is also white.
“The year my son competed” so not THIS year.
Coca-Cola wouldn't have done that any year, doesn't matter. They just take the best applicants, they don't have any quotas
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I kinda hate it when rich private school kids get these big-name awards when they don’t need the money *sigh*
Winning is a function of their access, connections, and $$$
Yep. Poor kids aren’t *volunteering* 500 hours, they’re *working* 500 hours.
Anonymous wrote:I kinda hate it when rich private school kids get these big-name awards when they don’t need the money *sigh*
Winning is a function of their access, connections, and $$$
Anonymous wrote:It's a big honor, and is also known to heavily weigh service hours as a primary component of qualification.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Those are the top schools for winners? They must be top students, what does it take to win?
They basically pick 150 of the best all-around students in the country, similar to what USA Today used to do with All-Academic Teams in the country. This year there were 91,000+ applicants to get the final 150 winners - an acceptance rate of 0.15%.
The year my son competed they picked almost exclusively students of color.
Provide the year so I can verify.
+1 the girl I know who won and who’s going to Duke next year is white. The girl from DC is also white.
“The year my son competed” so not THIS year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need a ton of volunteer hours for Coca Cola, Elks etc. it is a tremendous accomplishment
Out of curiosity, what is conserved a ton of service hours? How many hours?
Anonymous wrote:You need a ton of volunteer hours for Coca Cola, Elks etc. it is a tremendous accomplishment
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Those are the top schools for winners? They must be top students, what does it take to win?
They basically pick 150 of the best all-around students in the country, similar to what USA Today used to do with All-Academic Teams in the country. This year there were 91,000+ applicants to get the final 150 winners - an acceptance rate of 0.15%.
The year my son competed they picked almost exclusively students of color.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Those are the top schools for winners? They must be top students, what does it take to win?
They basically pick 150 of the best all-around students in the country, similar to what USA Today used to do with All-Academic Teams in the country. This year there were 91,000+ applicants to get the final 150 winners - an acceptance rate of 0.15%.
The year my son competed they picked almost exclusively students of color.
Provide the year so I can verify.
+1 the girl I know who won and who’s going to Duke next year is white. The girl from DC is also white.