Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC is a senior at area private school. College counseling office described this year's application results as "historically awful." This seem to be born out by what I'm seeing/hearing. Lots of deferrals and rejections.
Even for full pay families? Our college advisor said that while so far it’s true results are significantly worse this year, it’s mostly being experienced by those families applying for FA, not full pay. Sounds much like the misbalanced impact of the pandemic itself.
NP. Yes, even for full pay families. We are a full pay family at a Big 3. My kid has been deferred at 7 schools: safeties, matches and reaches. Similar results for ALL DC’s friends that are also full pay. My DC is a complete wreck.
Anonymous wrote:I suspect these schools are taking many fewer in the early round as they wait and see whetger they will actually be able to open. If they are unable to open their class sizes will probably be much smaller because many will choose to defer. They also have to wait and see where kids that deferred this year choose to come back next year. Then there is a complicating factor of whether international students will be able to come to the US at all from certain countries. It is a very complicated algorithm trying to get the class-size correct.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder where the spots are going. Are colleges taking more full pay students from less populated states who have good grades at ok schools but no test scores to compare them to students from major cities? or are they taking more underrepresented (by any socioeconomic demographic) students who need financial assistance? It's hard to imagine that colleges would significantly increase their share of scholarship students.
Better GPA from area publics where the kids are also full pay?
+2 This
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder where the spots are going. Are colleges taking more full pay students from less populated states who have good grades at ok schools but no test scores to compare them to students from major cities? or are they taking more underrepresented (by any socioeconomic demographic) students who need financial assistance? It's hard to imagine that colleges would significantly increase their share of scholarship students.
Better GPA from area publics where the kids are also full pay?
+2 This
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder where the spots are going. Are colleges taking more full pay students from less populated states who have good grades at ok schools but no test scores to compare them to students from major cities? or are they taking more underrepresented (by any socioeconomic demographic) students who need financial assistance? It's hard to imagine that colleges would significantly increase their share of scholarship students.
Better GPA from area publics where the kids are also full pay?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC is a senior at area private school. College counseling office described this year's application results as "historically awful." This seem to be born out by what I'm seeing/hearing. Lots of deferrals and rejections.
Even for full pay families? Our college advisor said that while so far it’s true results are significantly worse this year, it’s mostly being experienced by those families applying for FA, not full pay. Sounds much like the misbalanced impact of the pandemic itself.
NP. Yes, even for full pay families. We are a full pay family at a Big 3. My kid has been deferred at 7 schools: safeties, matches and reaches. Similar results for ALL DC’s friends that are also full pay. My DC is a complete wreck.
Most kids at big 3 do not apply to 7 schools during early decision/early action unless you also include state schools bc most of the private colleges these kids apply to have a restrictive early action or can only apply to only one school for early decision. We know several seniors at our big 3 school who got into their early school.
Anonymous wrote:I wonder where the spots are going. Are colleges taking more full pay students from less populated states who have good grades at ok schools but no test scores to compare them to students from major cities? or are they taking more underrepresented (by any socioeconomic demographic) students who need financial assistance? It's hard to imagine that colleges would significantly increase their share of scholarship students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC is a senior at area private school. College counseling office described this year's application results as "historically awful." This seem to be born out by what I'm seeing/hearing. Lots of deferrals and rejections.
Even for full pay families? Our college advisor said that while so far it’s true results are significantly worse this year, it’s mostly being experienced by those families applying for FA, not full pay. Sounds much like the misbalanced impact of the pandemic itself.
NP. Yes, even for full pay families. We are a full pay family at a Big 3. My kid has been deferred at 7 schools: safeties, matches and reaches. Similar results for ALL DC’s friends that are also full pay. My DC is a complete wreck.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC is a senior at area private school. College counseling office described this year's application results as "historically awful." This seem to be born out by what I'm seeing/hearing. Lots of deferrals and rejections.
Even for full pay families? Our college advisor said that while so far it’s true results are significantly worse this year, it’s mostly being experienced by those families applying for FA, not full pay. Sounds much like the misbalanced impact of the pandemic itself.
NP. Yes, even for full pay families. We are a full pay family at a Big 3. My kid has been deferred at 7 schools: safeties, matches and reaches. Similar results for ALL DC’s friends that are also full pay. My DC is a complete wreck.
Anonymous wrote:I wonder where the spots are going. Are colleges taking more full pay students from less populated states who have good grades at ok schools but no test scores to compare them to students from major cities? or are they taking more underrepresented (by any socioeconomic demographic) students who need financial assistance? It's hard to imagine that colleges would significantly increase their share of scholarship students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC is a senior at area private school. College counseling office described this year's application results as "historically awful." This seem to be born out by what I'm seeing/hearing. Lots of deferrals and rejections.
Even for full pay families? Our college advisor said that while so far it’s true results are significantly worse this year, it’s mostly being experienced by those families applying for FA, not full pay. Sounds much like the misbalanced impact of the pandemic itself.
Anonymous wrote:DC is a senior at area private school. College counseling office described this year's application results as "historically awful." This seem to be born out by what I'm seeing/hearing. Lots of deferrals and rejections.