Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lol. A B student wouldn't get into my run of the mill state school these days. How is that not a problem?
I think it just goes to show how crazy college admissions is these days.
I went to a middling no name state u back in the day. They used to admit almost everyone. Now? goodness.. the acceptance rate is like 60%. It's nuts.
Anonymous wrote:LISTEN UP! B students are fine! B students will go to college and be successful!! B students will receive scholarships!
Stop calling your kids that!
They are fine!
Signed-A B student who is now a pharmacist!
Anonymous wrote:My DS had a 3.1 GPA from FPCS but got recruited to play Lacrosse at a P5 school. My other DS, 4.4 GPA with 1600 on the SAT, attended Yale, and that was eight years ago. The 3.1 GPA DS is currently making around 750K/year while the other Yale's DS is making 105K/year. IMHO, it is not about the school, it is how you make it while you are there. It is the EQ that matters.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DS had a 3.1 GPA from FPCS but got recruited to play Lacrosse at a P5 school. My other DS, 4.4 GPA with 1600 on the SAT, attended Yale, and that was eight years ago. The 3.1 GPA DS is currently making around 750K/year while the other Yale's DS is making 105K/year. IMHO, it is not about the school, it is how you make it while you are there. It is the EQ that matters.
Is the 3.1 student in finance, law or tech? Making 750k how many years out of school? Both boys sound talented. Congrats to them! Agree on EQ mattering. My DS has a high EQ and is the charming, extroverted, likable type. I know he will be successful regardless if where he goes to school.
Anonymous wrote:I think it's a big problem how status-obsessed and dreary you all sound. Also explains a lot about the current crop of intellectual thought: didactic, evangelical, rigid, and more hierarchial than an Indian caste system.
I actually pity you. That's such a sad way to live.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nobody said they weren't "fine". But, it doesn't make sense to pay up the nose for an expensive college where the ROI isn't there.
-signed a parent of an A and B student
This is only true you don’t grow or learn anything in college and your kid peaks at 17.
Your paying for the opportunities and facilities and the education, what are your kids doing at college if they got everything they needed in High School?
Anonymous wrote:My DS had a 3.1 GPA from FPCS but got recruited to play Lacrosse at a P5 school. My other DS, 4.4 GPA with 1600 on the SAT, attended Yale, and that was eight years ago. The 3.1 GPA DS is currently making around 750K/year while the other Yale's DS is making 105K/year. IMHO, it is not about the school, it is how you make it while you are there. It is the EQ that matters.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nobody said they weren't "fine". But, it doesn't make sense to pay up the nose for an expensive college where the ROI isn't there.
-signed a parent of an A and B student
I don't think my kids need to "earn" my investment in them. My younger child is a stronger student than my older child, but they both deserve an equal share of what we're able to pay for college. If anything, the weaker student needs a smaller environment where she can more easily get to know professors. My stronger student would likely thrive in the larger environment of a big state university.
+1
I think you set yourself up for lifetime relationship issues/sibling tensions if you start saying one kid "deserves" more based on their academic achievements. Doesn't mean you have to spend the same on them--but the choice should be balancing between what suits their needs best and what you can afford.
+1
My "not as academic" student---3.5UW/1200/1 AP that they got their only grade lower than a B in HS in first semester (they got a D, really they got an F and teacher was nice) is a successful college grad from a T100 school with a 3.4in college, hired immediately at a great company, got a great first year review and over 10% raise. Their top choice of college cost $58K/year and with merit only cost $40K each year.
Meanwhile their "much more academic sibling" with a 3.99UW/1520/9APs with all 4/5s is at a T40 that's 80k+ and doesn't give much merit (they got none).
Both are at their best choice after reviewing acceptances and for both we would pay whatever was needed. My first did much better at the private more expensive school than at the huge State U that would have only cost $20K/year---they thrived once they found their footing and that is what college is all about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nobody said they weren't "fine". But, it doesn't make sense to pay up the nose for an expensive college where the ROI isn't there.
-signed a parent of an A and B student
I don't think my kids need to "earn" my investment in them. My younger child is a stronger student than my older child, but they both deserve an equal share of what we're able to pay for college. If anything, the weaker student needs a smaller environment where she can more easily get to know professors. My stronger student would likely thrive in the larger environment of a big state university.