Anonymous wrote:Parents, please stop passing off your work as your child's. Your $3M new startup is not going to put Google out of business. If we can see through this, don't you think the AOs do?
Anonymous wrote:For those of your kids getting into selective colleges, what is your kids intended major? My kid wants to do CS, so he is hands down learning coding, creating passion project apps etc.. Not much time left for anything else.
Do you think opening a pet or lawn business would help with CS major admission at a selective university?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I doubt it. At a recent school info session, we were handed a document new from 2024 that showed how many non profit starters there were who were admitted ED and EA so far.
Drives me nuts. So many of these non profits serve absolutely no one.
Is it me, or do many of them seem to specialize in providing sick kids with stuffed animals?
Anonymous wrote:My teen actually has started a modestly profitable business (not huge amounts of money but a legit side hustle, profit is about 2k per month currently) and I don’t even know that he’ll mention it because we all assume admissions people would think it was bogus.
Anonymous wrote:My kid started a lawn business
😂
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The whole college admissions is BS and a game.
From these fake nonprofits to hiring college consultants, including essay reviewers and, in some cases, writers.
It's just all BS.
The only measurable factors are the grades and test scores. Yea, you can hire tutors for them, but you, the student, still has to take the tests and do the work.
Agreed so what do you do for a kid who wants to go to a top school when everyone else's parents are piling on the BS?
There's not much evidence that the BS works.
Then why do so many people hire college consultants?
They do more than just make up these fake businesses though.
The key is a cohesive narrative that whines through the entire set of 4yr coursework, summer jobs/experiences, recommenders letters, and the college counseling office letter. Along with all of the essays. It’s seamless. That’s what you’re paying for. Also potentially access to internships or similar types of prestigious jobs.
If you can’t use your own network to procure them for your offspring.
It’s easy to do all of this if you are a stay at home parent, and have a fabulous network.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The whole college admissions is BS and a game.
From these fake nonprofits to hiring college consultants, including essay reviewers and, in some cases, writers.
It's just all BS.
The only measurable factors are the grades and test scores. Yea, you can hire tutors for them, but you, the student, still has to take the tests and do the work.
Agreed so what do you do for a kid who wants to go to a top school when everyone else's parents are piling on the BS?
There's not much evidence that the BS works.
Then why do so many people hire college consultants?
They do more than just make up these fake businesses though.
The key is a cohesive narrative that whines through the entire set of 4yr coursework, summer jobs/experiences, recommenders letters, and the college counseling office letter. Along with all of the essays. It’s seamless. That’s what you’re paying for. Also potentially access to internships or similar types of prestigious jobs.
If you can’t use your own network to procure them for your offspring.
It’s easy to do all of this if you are a stay at home parent, and have a fabulous network.
That's why it's all BS. Most kids don't have this kind of connection, and they aren't putting the work in by themselves.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The whole college admissions is BS and a game.
From these fake nonprofits to hiring college consultants, including essay reviewers and, in some cases, writers.
It's just all BS.
The only measurable factors are the grades and test scores. Yea, you can hire tutors for them, but you, the student, still has to take the tests and do the work.
Agreed so what do you do for a kid who wants to go to a top school when everyone else's parents are piling on the BS?
There's not much evidence that the BS works.
Then why do so many people hire college consultants?
They do more than just make up these fake businesses though.
The key is a cohesive narrative that whines through the entire set of 4yr coursework, summer jobs/experiences, recommenders letters, and the college counseling office letter. Along with all of the essays. It’s seamless. That’s what you’re paying for. Also potentially access to internships or similar types of prestigious jobs.
If you can’t use your own network to procure them for your offspring.
It’s easy to do all of this if you are a stay at home parent, and have a fabulous network.
Anonymous wrote:As a professor myself and having known many undergraduate students, I can think of vanishingly few who would have been capable of incorporating a nonprofit in HS (or even in college). Making money at a self-starting job (what's the difference between providing goods/services for pay on a private basis vs. running a 'business' anyway?), ok. But more than that is generally going to have to be dressed up by adults.
Anonymous wrote:As a professor myself and having known many undergraduate students, I can think of vanishingly few who would have been capable of incorporating a nonprofit in HS (or even in college). Making money at a self-starting job (what's the difference between providing goods/services for pay on a private basis vs. running a 'business' anyway?), ok. But more than that is generally going to have to be dressed up by adults.
Anonymous wrote:Oh my. Glad my second rate public school circle does not do this.