Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Funny how all these "different posters" have inside knowledge as to Washington Universities motives. Pretty sure top 15 schools get more than enough applications.
NP. You don't have to be an insider to know this stuff. Some guy wrote a book about how this particular school games the admission process.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Funny how all these "different posters" have inside knowledge as to Washington Universities motives. Pretty sure top 15 schools get more than enough applications.
NP. You don't have to be an insider to know this stuff. Some guy wrote a book about how this particular school games the admission process.
Anonymous wrote:Funny how all these "different posters" have inside knowledge as to Washington Universities motives. Pretty sure top 15 schools get more than enough applications.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's no better than U.Va. or College Park but popular with kids who can't get into Ivies, Stanford or Duke.
My kid was accepted at Yale, Stanford, and Duke (among other schools including Williams) but chose to attend WUSTL because it was one of the two "top 20" ranked schools (the other being Duke) that offered substantial merit-based aid (we don't qualify for need-based aid which is the only kind that most other top schools provide). My kid is not unique; WUSTL is teeming with students who got into "Ivies, Stanford or Duke" but, like my kid, are attending WUSTL because they received a half-to-full (+stipend) scholarship that is guaranteed for 4 years. I think that my kid would be attending Stanford if he hadn't received a scholarship to WUSTL but we simply didn't see the value of paying $60K per year when attending WUSTL is a fraction of the cost of attending any other top-ranked, private school and comparable to attending our state school. Even if WUSTL is "no better than U.VA or College Park" or if it's "popular with kids who can't get into Ivies, Stanford or Duke," WUSTL gives a lot of money to kids who can get into Ivies, etc. and these students attend too (my kid's dorm-mate turned down Harvard to choose between "full ride" scholarships from Duke and WUSTL).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again, I will reiterate that Wash U reaches out to students it has no intent of admitting, encouraging them to apply, just so it can appear to be more selective. Other schools with which it would like to be compared simply don't do this. The kids see through this and most parents know exactly what they are trying to do.
So, I guess this means that your kid got rejected from Wash U?
That is how your repeated posts make it appear.
It doesn't give the impression at all that there is anything wrong or dubious about Wash U's admission process. It just makes it seem like you have sour grapes.
I'm one of the PPs and my DC was never interested in Wash U. It was a good friend of mine who visited with her child who was given the "free preliminary application." They decided not to apply.
Anonymous wrote:It's no better than U.Va. or College Park but popular with kids who can't get into Ivies, Stanford or Duke.
Anonymous wrote:Another thing is how the "different posters" just know that WashU targets applicants that WashU KNOWS won't be admitted. Even very selective schools will on occasion make some surprising admits - every heard of a reach school?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again, I will reiterate that Wash U reaches out to students it has no intent of admitting, encouraging them to apply, just so it can appear to be more selective. Other schools with which it would like to be compared simply don't do this. The kids see through this and most parents know exactly what they are trying to do.
So, I guess this means that your kid got rejected from Wash U?
That is how your repeated posts make it appear.
It doesn't give the impression at all that there is anything wrong or dubious about Wash U's admission process. It just makes it seem like you have sour grapes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again, I will reiterate that Wash U reaches out to students it has no intent of admitting, encouraging them to apply, just so it can appear to be more selective. Other schools with which it would like to be compared simply don't do this. The kids see through this and most parents know exactly what they are trying to do.
So, I guess this means that your kid got rejected from Wash U?
That is how your repeated posts make it appear.
It doesn't give the impression at all that there is anything wrong or dubious about Wash U's admission process. It just makes it seem like you have sour grapes.
I'm one of the PPs and my DC was never interested in Wash U. It was a good friend of mine who visited with her child who was given the "free preliminary application." They decided not to apply.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again, I will reiterate that Wash U reaches out to students it has no intent of admitting, encouraging them to apply, just so it can appear to be more selective. Other schools with which it would like to be compared simply don't do this. The kids see through this and most parents know exactly what they are trying to do.
Imagine that there really was such a simple inexpensive way for a school to increase its academic standing - wouldn't you be disappointed if your school was too dumb to take advantage of it?
Since when do the rankings have anything to do with "academic standing?"
The rankings reward certain expenditures and distort the way schools handle admissions. I have very little respect for that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again, I will reiterate that Wash U reaches out to students it has no intent of admitting, encouraging them to apply, just so it can appear to be more selective. Other schools with which it would like to be compared simply don't do this. The kids see through this and most parents know exactly what they are trying to do.
So, I guess this means that your kid got rejected from Wash U?
That is how your repeated posts make it appear.
It doesn't give the impression at all that there is anything wrong or dubious about Wash U's admission process. It just makes it seem like you have sour grapes.