Anonymous wrote:Our 1290 SAT, 3.5 unweighted public school DC with only a couple APs got into 7 out of 7 engineering schools ranked from about #60 to just over #300.
Not URM but did have an EC that might have turned the heads of the #60 school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 3.0 GPA kid, 1 AP class, 23 ACT, is happy at McDaniel with good merit aid.
He looked at other small liberal arts schools with similar profiles but got into McDaniel early so he was one and done.
Little soon to be boasting. Let us know when or if your kid graduates. In 4...or 5 or 6 years. Lots of extra money for extra years. And the job placement after.
Anonymous wrote:AP/honors = university track. If you’re not in that track you’re not university material. The rigor in non-AP/honors is a flat out joke and several years behind the university bound kiddos.
Of course you don’t want to hear this, you’re in denial, you’ll cling to the fake A’s, and you’ll send junior off to some open door degree mill anyways for your ego. Then you’ll keep it hush hush when he fails out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Something like 40-45% of kids fail out of college, and half that do finish take extra years to earn an easy BA. It’s quite predictable to access who is ready for university - e.g., college track courses, good AP scores, a “college ready” SAT/ACT score.
Outside of the top 50 universities, the rest of the colleges in the US are basically degree mills who admit anyone with a pulse and access to funding. Don’t conflate acceptance with actual capacity to succeed. They want money above all.
This post seems unnecessarily mean.
Many of the "normal kids" described in this thread do try their best, but may not have the aptitude of the top students. It is still OK for them to go to college.
All decent jobs in this economy require at least a college degree. Some of the jobs are not really that taxing, or use skills that are not necessarily correlated with getting an A in math, and can be done by kids of average aptitude.
To have a chance for those jobs, these kids need a college degree. There is a place in this world for these no-name colleges that you so deride as degree mills.
We have the savings to be full pay at a college for our average student, and we plan to support him however he needs it to get a degree. After he graduates, he'll do a great job in the workplace for some employer because he's smart, funny, hard-working, responsible, and even good-looking.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 3.0 GPA kid, 1 AP class, 23 ACT, is happy at McDaniel with good merit aid.
He looked at other small liberal arts schools with similar profiles but got into McDaniel early so he was one and done.
Little soon to be boasting. Let us know when or if your kid graduates. In 4...or 5 or 6 years. Lots of extra money for extra years. And the job placement after.
NP: doesn’t sound like the PP was boasting. My NoVa kid graduated from McDaniel and is attending med school.
Lots of personal attention at small schools. It was perfect for my kid.
Run your own race.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Something like 40-45% of kids fail out of college, and half that do finish take extra years to earn an easy BA. It’s quite predictable to access who is ready for university - e.g., college track courses, good AP scores, a “college ready” SAT/ACT score.
Outside of the top 50 universities, the rest of the colleges in the US are basically degree mills who admit anyone with a pulse and access to funding. Don’t conflate acceptance with actual capacity to succeed. They want money above all.
This post seems unnecessarily mean.
Many of the "normal kids" described in this thread do try their best, but may not have the aptitude of the top students. It is still OK for them to go to college.
All decent jobs in this economy require at least a college degree. Some of the jobs are not really that taxing, or use skills that are not necessarily correlated with getting an A in math, and can be done by kids of average aptitude.
To have a chance for those jobs, these kids need a college degree. There is a place in this world for these no-name colleges that you so deride as degree mills.
We have the savings to be full pay at a college for our average student, and we plan to support him however he needs it to get a degree. After he graduates, he'll do a great job in the workplace for some employer because he's smart, funny, hard-working, responsible, and even good-looking.
Anonymous wrote:Something like 40-45% of kids fail out of college, and half that do finish take extra years to earn an easy BA. It’s quite predictable to access who is ready for university - e.g., college track courses, good AP scores, a “college ready” SAT/ACT score.
Outside of the top 50 universities, the rest of the colleges in the US are basically degree mills who admit anyone with a pulse and access to funding. Don’t conflate acceptance with actual capacity to succeed. They want money above all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 3.0 GPA kid, 1 AP class, 23 ACT, is happy at McDaniel with good merit aid.
He looked at other small liberal arts schools with similar profiles but got into McDaniel early so he was one and done.
A little surprising someone with a 3.0/23 can get merit anywhere, but good on them.
It’s risky going to a small, little-known school unless the student really takes advantage and turns things around, including getting mostly A’s, doing research and getting internships. But most students at these schools are not like this, and tend to revert to their norm.
Anonymous wrote:Please share where your "normal" kid went to college. 2 years in a non AP school so no weighting but As and Bs. Now in public school where it feels like everyone is loaded with APs. DC is not. So average schedule for this year at least, and a B/A student.
Anonymous wrote:For public schools
Every VA school except UVA and W&M
Every MD school except College Park
Every FLA school except Gainesville
Every NC school except Chapel Hill
So basically everywhere except maybe 1 school in each state.
Anonymous wrote:What is a kid called who graduates from college but no
an Ivy?
A college graduate.
The fixation on the Ivy's on this forum is ridiculous.
They don't have good value for the money.