Anonymous wrote:Me and bro both went to UMD out of W high school. Both got into Ivies like Penn, Cornell, Columbia. Bro got into MIT and wait listed at Harvard. We both chose UMD for scholarships, he got a full ride. Afterwards we both went to top 10 law schools so don't knock it until you try it.
You go girl!Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like you know half of the top acceptances from Blair. http://bethesdamagazine.com/College_Chart.pdf
If s/he's in the magnet program that's totally believable.
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like you know half of the top acceptances from Blair. http://bethesdamagazine.com/College_Chart.pdf
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:]Anonymous wrote:I've been a Harvard interviewer in this area for a while. We see a lot of great kids coming out of Whitman and BCC, and of course Blair Magnet. The kids from the other high schools are less competitive for a few reasons. Some don't have the academics (a common refrain among interviewers is "I'd never get in today", where SATs of all 750+, at least 3 APs with 5's as a junior and weighted GPA well over 4 only puts you in the top third of applicants, and Harvard takes the top fourth of that group.) However, a lot of it is the lack of extracurricular distinction. Kids stuck in cul-de-sacs tend to have less involvement In extracurriculars, and don't have the leadership or the independent research projects that we see at the most competitive schools.
Do you think a kid who is top of their class at a lesser ranked MCPS school might have a better chance of getting in?
I assume (but do not know for a fact) that the number of kids applying to Harvard from Wheaton HS (80% ever FARMS) or Watkins Mill HS (72% ever FARMS) is a lot smaller than the number of kids applying to Harvard from Whitman or Churchill.
Anonymous wrote:DC is going to magnet program at MCPS. Most of DCs peers want to get into medicine, law, engineering etc. While Ivies are affordable for some, most will choose UMD for their undergrad. They will get into top schools for graduate and other professional qualification after that. They will also get a full ride at UMD for their undergrad. These are smart kids who are looking closely at the majors rather than how the schools are ranked.
DC will graduate with upwards of 15 APs, great SAT and GPA, extra curricular activities, hundred of SSL hours. However if DC decides to go for ethnic studies at Harvard...I am not paying for anything.
Anonymous wrote:]Anonymous wrote:I've been a Harvard interviewer in this area for a while. We see a lot of great kids coming out of Whitman and BCC, and of course Blair Magnet. The kids from the other high schools are less competitive for a few reasons. Some don't have the academics (a common refrain among interviewers is "I'd never get in today", where SATs of all 750+, at least 3 APs with 5's as a junior and weighted GPA well over 4 only puts you in the top third of applicants, and Harvard takes the top fourth of that group.) However, a lot of it is the lack of extracurricular distinction. Kids stuck in cul-de-sacs tend to have less involvement In extracurriculars, and don't have the leadership or the independent research projects that we see at the most competitive schools.
Do you think a kid who is top of their class at a lesser ranked MCPS school might have a better chance of getting in?
]Anonymous wrote:I've been a Harvard interviewer in this area for a while. We see a lot of great kids coming out of Whitman and BCC, and of course Blair Magnet. The kids from the other high schools are less competitive for a few reasons. Some don't have the academics (a common refrain among interviewers is "I'd never get in today", where SATs of all 750+, at least 3 APs with 5's as a junior and weighted GPA well over 4 only puts you in the top third of applicants, and Harvard takes the top fourth of that group.) However, a lot of it is the lack of extracurricular distinction. Kids stuck in cul-de-sacs tend to have less involvement In extracurriculars, and don't have the leadership or the independent research projects that we see at the most competitive schools.
Anonymous wrote:The Washingtonian or Bethesda Magazine recently published this. It was disturbing. Not aiming for Harvard but community college or UMD is not OK.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This might be true, but IMO, it lacks a "true college experience". I wouldn't want my child to go to UMD, and at our private school (not a Big 3) it's considered a failure to go to UMD.
This says a lot more about the people at your private school than about UMD.
Why would you not want your child to go to UMD?