Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi, OP again. He has already screenshotted it.
He is going to talk to the teacher involved with the position who can back him up. They will probably end up going to her counselor and letting her know about the falsified resume. From there he will let the high school decide whether to contact the colleges she has been accepted to.
And again, he is not upset that he didn't get in. As I said before, he is committed to his first choice. Nor does he think that this made a difference with respect to the decisions.
What he IS upset about is that she is getting away with lying. He has a strong sense of justice and does not like the amount of rampant cheating that goes on in his high school, and that everyone gets away with it. He complains about it frequently.
Catholic poster again. I suppose this is a fair, compromise resolution under the circumstances.
The young woman will certainly have the fear of God put into her when the faculty advisor for that activity, as well as her college counselor, confront her with her lie (possibly in front of her parents, if they are invited to the meeting). She will be not only be caught in her lie, but she will be rightly diminished in the eyes of the activity's faculty advisor and the college counselor because of it. The young woman will certainly be mortified, clearly understand the serious nature of her lie, feel truly sorry and apologize, and correct the lie. Hopefully this resolution will allow the young woman to learn an extremely important lesson about ethical behavior, without the consequences derailing her future plans (at least this, hopefully the last, time).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi, OP again. He has already screenshotted it.
He is going to talk to the teacher involved with the position who can back him up. They will probably end up going to her counselor and letting her know about the falsified resume. From there he will let the high school decide whether to contact the colleges she has been accepted to.
And again, he is not upset that he didn't get in. As I said before, he is committed to his first choice. Nor does he think that this made a difference with respect to the decisions.
What he IS upset about is that she is getting away with lying. He has a strong sense of justice and does not like the amount of rampant cheating that goes on in his high school, and that everyone gets away with it. He complains about it frequently.
Kudos to your son.
Yep, good for him!
Anonymous wrote:Hi, OP again. He has already screenshotted it.
He is going to talk to the teacher involved with the position who can back him up. They will probably end up going to her counselor and letting her know about the falsified resume. From there he will let the high school decide whether to contact the colleges she has been accepted to.
And again, he is not upset that he didn't get in. As I said before, he is committed to his first choice. Nor does he think that this made a difference with respect to the decisions.
What he IS upset about is that she is getting away with lying. He has a strong sense of justice and does not like the amount of rampant cheating that goes on in his high school, and that everyone gets away with it. He complains about it frequently.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi, OP again. He has already screenshotted it.
He is going to talk to the teacher involved with the position who can back him up. They will probably end up going to her counselor and letting her know about the falsified resume. From there he will let the high school decide whether to contact the colleges she has been accepted to.
And again, he is not upset that he didn't get in. As I said before, he is committed to his first choice. Nor does he think that this made a difference with respect to the decisions.
What he IS upset about is that she is getting away with lying. He has a strong sense of justice and does not like the amount of rampant cheating that goes on in his high school, and that everyone gets away with it. He complains about it frequently.
Kudos to your son.
Anonymous wrote:Hi, OP again. He has already screenshotted it.
He is going to talk to the teacher involved with the position who can back him up. They will probably end up going to her counselor and letting her know about the falsified resume. From there he will let the high school decide whether to contact the colleges she has been accepted to.
And again, he is not upset that he didn't get in. As I said before, he is committed to his first choice. Nor does he think that this made a difference with respect to the decisions.
What he IS upset about is that she is getting away with lying. He has a strong sense of justice and does not like the amount of rampant cheating that goes on in his high school, and that everyone gets away with it. He complains about it frequently.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anon letter by snail mail to AD. let the school decide. Leave your son's name out of it. Honor code is a BIG deal in some schools. probably won't result in much -- but she should not have lied. some other, more deserving student may have been rejected in favor of this girls deceit. Ignore the haters and do what is right. waitlist movement.
Plus I think it will remind the school to fact check and not take what kids put on their apps as the gospel truth. This is no different than how future employers would treat the situation.
Again, this approach is not to be taken lightly as it may result in the young lady having her admission rescinded at some point when she either did not apply to other colleges (if it was EA), or when she has already turned down her other options (if the matter is not resolved until summer).
But she chose to misrepresent her experience - she could have accurately communicated what she did and live with the results. She was the one who decided to lie - but if she gets caught in the lie someone else is to blame?
Anonymous wrote:A girl was admitted to a school my son was rejected to. She has a personal website with a resume on it and on it she lists that she has a fairly substantial leadership position that is actually my son's. The resume is also filled with, likely, other lies and exaggerations (my son knows her pretty well and can tell that some of them are made up, but has no proof for anything other than that leadership position). He came to me asking for advice and showed me the resume, but I don't know what to do.
The school is not his first choice and he is not upset about his rejection. He was already committed to his first choice. He is, however, upset to see a liar get away with it and to see the benefit of an elite school education wasted on this girl.

Anonymous wrote:Presumably your son listed his leadership position on his application. It apparently didn't get him in so chances are it didn't get her in either. She probably had better test scores and GPA.
You have no idea what her common app said or if colleges would look at her resume. Some colleges specifically say not to send resumes. Let it go.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anon letter by snail mail to AD. let the school decide. Leave your son's name out of it. Honor code is a BIG deal in some schools. probably won't result in much -- but she should not have lied. some other, more deserving student may have been rejected in favor of this girls deceit. Ignore the haters and do what is right. waitlist movement.
Plus I think it will remind the school to fact check and not take what kids put on their apps as the gospel truth. This is no different than how future employers would treat the situation.
Again, this approach is not to be taken lightly as it may result in the young lady having her admission rescinded at some point when she either did not apply to other colleges (if it was EA), or when she has already turned down her other options (if the matter is not resolved until summer).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anon letter by snail mail to AD. let the school decide. Leave your son's name out of it. Honor code is a BIG deal in some schools. probably won't result in much -- but she should not have lied. some other, more deserving student may have been rejected in favor of this girls deceit. Ignore the haters and do what is right. waitlist movement.
Plus I think it will remind the school to fact check and not take what kids put on their apps as the gospel truth. This is no different than how future employers would treat the situation.
Anonymous wrote:Anon letter by snail mail to AD. let the school decide. Leave your son's name out of it. Honor code is a BIG deal in some schools. probably won't result in much -- but she should not have lied. some other, more deserving student may have been rejected in favor of this girls deceit. Ignore the haters and do what is right. waitlist movement.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Have your son approach his classmate and politely say, "I read your resume on the website, and you appear to have mistakenly and in error listed X position as one you hold when, in fact, you and I both know that I hold X position. I would appreciate it if you would change your mistake."
He might follow up, as guidance, "employers sometimes let people go who include such mistakes on their resumes." She will get the message loud and clear, but your son won't be responsible for having her admissions rescinded (which he might feel guilty about in the long run).
LOLllll get serious. Say those words out loud and imagine a 17 year old boy saying them to a classmate. He would be a mockery of the school.