Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe I am late to the game but I met a parent who told me to sign up for cub scouts with her kid so the boys can ear badges and become Eagle Scouts and put that on their college applications.. I was a bit shocked that a parent of a 4th grader is planning to do this.. is this a thing? Kids do scouts for college applications? Cub scouts gets you into an Ivy ?
Do kids do anything just for their own interest or love/passion? Or is it only because of what would look good on their applications?
Yup. Cub scouts guarantees you an Ivy.
100%
+1
Many people are saying this.
ok, people, stop teasing OP.
No, OP, it's not a guarantee. It might help later in life for an internship, but not in college admissions.
DS is an Eagle Scout, now in college. It didn't help DS get into his top 2 choices, but then again, he is a CS major. But, being an Eagle Scout can be like being in a fraternity in that when another Eagle Scout sees your resume with Eagle Scout on it, they may put that resume in the "follow up" pile, rather than the discard pile.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are 1900 freshmen at Harvard and this includes all the athletes, minorities, VIPs, etc.
There are 70,000 Eagle Scouts.
Do the math. The admission rate for these Eagle Scouts is no better than the average admission rate to Harvard.
But there are other Ivys right? Not just Harvard. There are also other top schools besides the Ivy League.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Colleges don’t care if you are an Eagle Scout.
Not to mention that I’ve known five or six Eagle Scouts - and every single one of them has been a weirdo.
I would rather my child be a "weirdo" than be an adult insulting children.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Colleges don’t care if you are an Eagle Scout.
Not to mention that I’ve known five or six Eagle Scouts - and every single one of them has been a weirdo.
Anonymous wrote:Colleges don’t care if you are an Eagle Scout.
Anonymous wrote:Ivy and Eagle Scout shouldn’t be in the same sentence. You’re applying to college, not the Salvation Army. Get creative and pursue something you actually care about. Make your own opportunities outside of an organization with cookie-cutter achievement ranks. Do you really think Harvard cares if you know how to tie a slip knot? Or if you’ve tied it a hundred or a thousand times? How obnoxiously trite and boring.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here- so Eagle Scouts is a big boost?
In many situations yes. But do you realize how much time and commitment it takes over many years to achieve this?
Isn’t that true for everything? Which activity doesn’t require time and commitment? If anything, scouts seems easier than say travel sports and swim teams, ice hockey and other sports.
Anonymous wrote:About 70,000 kids are named Eagle Scouts each year in the US.
It's not exactly an extraordinary accomplishment.