Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lol so many people triggered by the implication that the top schools might not be the absolute greatest in every aspect, or that some people may have had a better impression of those schools in the past than now. Calm down, these schools aren’t your identity or personality, nor do you owe them anything.
having drunken parties every weekend is not everyone's idea of greatness. this thread actually got me interested in top schools.
That’s not what we are talking about but you are exactly the type of person I’m talking about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lol so many people triggered by the implication that the top schools might not be the absolute greatest in every aspect, or that some people may have had a better impression of those schools in the past than now. Calm down, these schools aren’t your identity or personality, nor do you owe them anything.
having drunken parties every weekend is not everyone's idea of greatness. this thread actually got me interested in top schools.
That’s not what we are talking about but you are exactly the type of person I’m talking about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lol so many people triggered by the implication that the top schools might not be the absolute greatest in every aspect, or that some people may have had a better impression of those schools in the past than now. Calm down, these schools aren’t your identity or personality, nor do you owe them anything.
having drunken parties every weekend is not everyone's idea of greatness. this thread actually got me interested in top schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you toured the top 20 schools in the last 2 years and actually noticed the students at these schools? Have you seen the kids on the tours with you? The demographic of top 20 schools has changed drastically. The kids attending skew nerdy and awkward. If you are more of a “smart, social kid that likes to party” type, the Ivy and Ivy+ are not that appealing — especially if you are already a part of the 1%. The top 20s used to be filled with kids like this, but those days are gone.
this ^ 100% - I advise kids and invariably it is the parents and hard core nerds looking for ivies. The cool, relaxed, athletic, social - and most of all, smart - kids want the Dukes, Vandies, SMU, UCLAs of the world. The tide shifted post covid and is only accelerating. Often a big disconnect between the striving parent (just saw this term on another post - luv it) who is ivy or bust, and what the kid wants. And where the kid doesn’t get a say, it’s almost as if they are robots saying “yes, I want ivy”
Duke and Vandy are top 20 and have the nerdy/awkward kids too…you are trying to make the southern school argument (which is made repeatedly) which perhaps applies to places like UGA.
Also, you threw in UCLA which also doesn’t fit with your point.
Have you seen the incoming kids at Duke this month?
Beyond nerdy. Like awful
Anonymous wrote:This is what happens when you migrate from a lur mediocre rich privileged white guy system toward a meritocratic equity system.
When being the "top" takes work not birth, you end up with the hard workers.
Anonymous wrote:Lol so many people triggered by the implication that the top schools might not be the absolute greatest in every aspect, or that some people may have had a better impression of those schools in the past than now. Calm down, these schools aren’t your identity or personality, nor do you owe them anything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to a top 5 school in the 90s. There was a mix of kids: nerds, quirky types, rich kids, etc. Now it’s not a mixture anymore. All strivers with no social lives and no goals other than HYPSM. I wouldn’t encourage my kids to go for it.
Where would you encourage?
In my research (and talking to grads from our private HS), social, smart savvy kids seem to like:
Vanderbilt
Brown
Dartmouth
Stanford
Cornell (big Greek life/fratty scene)
UChicago
USC
Middlebury
Colgate
Syracuse
U-Miami
Tulane
SMU
And for public flagships:
Michigan
UCLA
UVA
Wisconsin
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you toured the top 20 schools in the last 2 years and actually noticed the students at these schools? Have you seen the kids on the tours with you? The demographic of top 20 schools has changed drastically. The kids attending skew nerdy and awkward. If you are more of a “smart, social kid that likes to party” type, the Ivy and Ivy+ are not that appealing — especially if you are already a part of the 1%. The top 20s used to be filled with kids like this, but those days are gone.
my point is the majority of striving kids are ivy obsessed because their parents are - probably at least 75% of ivy applicants are born of parent obsession. Whether that starts at 4 with kindergarten interviews in NYC, or in 3rd grade with tiger mom jamming instrument lessons, the bulk of kids opinions are a direct correlation to and result of mom and dads subtle or direct influence. Cmon what kid would legit want to go to Cornell over Vandy - it’s all parent influence over the years and an unconscious desire to pls mummy and daddy
You do realize that for many—literally tens of thousands of kids—they feel at home and love the nerdy skew of the ivy/ivy plus schools? And for them they do find them socially appealing? You make it sound as though no one really wants to go there and if they do they couldn’t possibly enjoy the place and be social? Social does not mean drinking and nothing else. Some students want a place they can have intellectual conversations and also be young and silly and have fun. If you had a kid where the schools were a fit, you would know it right away on tours. Their whole aura changes. They get there and love it despite all the hard work studying. You are correct the schools have changed—but they are a great fit for a subset of students. Some people are not chasing $ they are chasing fit. Already being top 1% or being a low income kid does not matter: they are chasing the same fit.
sorry effed up post, dont do this much -here it is correctly
my point is the majority of striving kids are ivy obsessed because their parents are - probably at least 75% of ivy applicants are born of parent obsession. Whether that starts at 4 with kindergarten interviews in NYC, or in 3rd grade with tiger mom jamming instrument lessons, the bulk of kids opinions are a direct correlation to and result of mom and dads subtle or direct influence. Cmon what kid would legit want to go to Cornell over Vandy - it’s all parent influence over the years and an unconscious desire to pls mummy and daddy
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to a top 5 school in the 90s. There was a mix of kids: nerds, quirky types, rich kids, etc. Now it’s not a mixture anymore. All strivers with no social lives and no goals other than HYPSM. I wouldn’t encourage my kids to go for it.
Where would you encourage?
In my research (and talking to grads from our private HS), social, smart savvy kids seem to like:
Vanderbilt
Brown
Dartmouth
Stanford
Cornell (big Greek life/fratty scene)
UChicago
USC
Middlebury
Colgate
Syracuse
U-Miami
Tulane
SMU
And for public flagships:
Michigan
UCLA
UVA
Wisconsin
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you toured the top 20 schools in the last 2 years and actually noticed the students at these schools? Have you seen the kids on the tours with you? The demographic of top 20 schools has changed drastically. The kids attending skew nerdy and awkward. If you are more of a “smart, social kid that likes to party” type, the Ivy and Ivy+ are not that appealing — especially if you are already a part of the 1%. The top 20s used to be filled with kids like this, but those days are gone.
this ^ 100% - I advise kids and invariably it is the parents and hard core nerds looking for ivies. The cool, relaxed, athletic, social - and most of all, smart - kids want the Dukes, Vandies, SMU, UCLAs of the world. The tide shifted post covid and is only accelerating. Often a big disconnect between the striving parent (just saw this term on another post - luv it) who is ivy or bust, and what the kid wants. And where the kid doesn’t get a say, it’s almost as if they are robots saying “yes, I want ivy”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you toured the top 20 schools in the last 2 years and actually noticed the students at these schools? Have you seen the kids on the tours with you? The demographic of top 20 schools has changed drastically. The kids attending skew nerdy and awkward. If you are more of a “smart, social kid that likes to party” type, the Ivy and Ivy+ are not that appealing — especially if you are already a part of the 1%. The top 20s used to be filled with kids like this, but those days are gone.
This isn’t consistent with where local private schools are sending their students.