Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Correct.
With that being said, most of my DD peers in the competitive Baltimore club lacrosse world go to rigorous private schools and they all seem over-leveraged in life and miserable.
I am only mentioning that because I'm a graduate of those same schools and do not/will not send my children to private out in the county where we live.
My kid is getting a great education and has a great quality of life as well. We are not commuting 40 minutes one way to and from. It is still day light when she walks thru the door after school. We are not competing with an endless supply of mathletes and homework culture. Our school also sends kids to the Ivys and NESCACS. We are relishing these last few years with her before she turns into an adult.
I will say that the most fun privates in Baltimore seem to be The St Pauls Schools and maybe RCPS.
completely agree. Public schools which can still offer lots of Honors and AP classes are a great fit for most athletic girls with top college aspirations.
Not in DC area. Public school lax sucks. So do public school educations.
There are some good public schools in NoVa and Bethesda area. As for lax, high school lax has little to no impact on recruiting
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Correct.
With that being said, most of my DD peers in the competitive Baltimore club lacrosse world go to rigorous private schools and they all seem over-leveraged in life and miserable.
I am only mentioning that because I'm a graduate of those same schools and do not/will not send my children to private out in the county where we live.
My kid is getting a great education and has a great quality of life as well. We are not commuting 40 minutes one way to and from. It is still day light when she walks thru the door after school. We are not competing with an endless supply of mathletes and homework culture. Our school also sends kids to the Ivys and NESCACS. We are relishing these last few years with her before she turns into an adult.
I will say that the most fun privates in Baltimore seem to be The St Pauls Schools and maybe RCPS.
completely agree. Public schools which can still offer lots of Honors and AP classes are a great fit for most athletic girls with top college aspirations.
Not in DC area. Public school lax sucks. So do public school educations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Correct.
With that being said, most of my DD peers in the competitive Baltimore club lacrosse world go to rigorous private schools and they all seem over-leveraged in life and miserable.
I am only mentioning that because I'm a graduate of those same schools and do not/will not send my children to private out in the county where we live.
My kid is getting a great education and has a great quality of life as well. We are not commuting 40 minutes one way to and from. It is still day light when she walks thru the door after school. We are not competing with an endless supply of mathletes and homework culture. Our school also sends kids to the Ivys and NESCACS. We are relishing these last few years with her before she turns into an adult.
I will say that the most fun privates in Baltimore seem to be The St Pauls Schools and maybe RCPS.
completely agree. Public schools which can still offer lots of Honors and AP classes are a great fit for most athletic girls with top college aspirations.
Anonymous wrote:Correct.
With that being said, most of my DD peers in the competitive Baltimore club lacrosse world go to rigorous private schools and they all seem over-leveraged in life and miserable.
I am only mentioning that because I'm a graduate of those same schools and do not/will not send my children to private out in the county where we live.
My kid is getting a great education and has a great quality of life as well. We are not commuting 40 minutes one way to and from. It is still day light when she walks thru the door after school. We are not competing with an endless supply of mathletes and homework culture. Our school also sends kids to the Ivys and NESCACS. We are relishing these last few years with her before she turns into an adult.
I will say that the most fun privates in Baltimore seem to be The St Pauls Schools and maybe RCPS.
Anonymous wrote:UVA, Vandy, Denver, Duke, Richmond all love(d) the private school recruits
Anonymous wrote:
I don’t understand the part about public school kids having an edge. How does capping the percentage of scholarship money to be given to public school kids give them an edge? And why would schools be doing that? Thank you in advance for a reply.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Waiting on the NY parent and other test optional denier parent to respond with an accept/
reject of this PP’s experience…..
The NY parent (me) authored the post above re: test optionals. And if you read everything I’ve written closely (you should be able to detect my style) you’ll see I’ve been entirely consistent. Other people have written that ivies are not test optional. A quick Google search shows that’s not true as a matter of *policy*. It’s the encouragement / expectation of these coaches to have their recruits test to make them stronger admission candidates that’s at issue. And that’s why, as I’ve explained, these ivy test-optionals aren’t really optional.
You seem to be the only one with an axe to grind here. You’ve offered nothing constructive to this discussion. Others have complimented me for providing detailed, helpful guidance (three by my count). Have a nice day.
DC parent here with two kids who've negotiated process...NY parent offers great guidance. I don't have an issue with the NY "attitude", because parents often need a wake up call. The process is a challenge and going in eyes open is critical. There is a ton of misinformation out there particularly on this forum. Different HA, even within Ivies, have different standards and it's profoundly foolish to bank on test optional next year. Good luck to y'all, glad my family is done.
True. 100%.
Another parent who has gone through the process. (One girl at Capital, another at a top MD club). Completely agree with PP. Ultimately, its about making yourself more recruitable whether its to an ivy or even another non-ivy high academic school like Duke, Stanford, ND, Georgetown or Davidson. Let me drop a couple more truth bombs which may make me even less popular than NY poster.
- Good early test scores are a big differentiator; you aren't required to share them for most schools so there is nothing to lose. Even if you aren't at their standards, if you are close it gives them confidence you can get there when you retake them
- Even more so are 4 or 5s on AP tests taken Freshman or Sophomore year
- Quality of classes taken is probably the most critical. These schools expect all honors classes plus at least 4-6 AP classes before you graduate
- all things being equal, public school kids will have an edge. As part of driving more diversity across student bodies, several schools are "capping" the % of scholarship $$ which can be given to kids from public school. Fully realize at this point there is nothing you can do about this, however, it is important to understand the landscape and why an equally talented girl from your club team may be getting a lot more interest than your kid.
As someone else said, these rules are relaxed if you are a top 40 national player. However, remember for every girl they take who is below standards 3.9 GPA/ 1350-1400, they need 2 more who are WELL above it
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Waiting on the NY parent and other test optional denier parent to respond with an accept/
reject of this PP’s experience…..
The NY parent (me) authored the post above re: test optionals. And if you read everything I’ve written closely (you should be able to detect my style) you’ll see I’ve been entirely consistent. Other people have written that ivies are not test optional. A quick Google search shows that’s not true as a matter of *policy*. It’s the encouragement / expectation of these coaches to have their recruits test to make them stronger admission candidates that’s at issue. And that’s why, as I’ve explained, these ivy test-optionals aren’t really optional.
You seem to be the only one with an axe to grind here. You’ve offered nothing constructive to this discussion. Others have complimented me for providing detailed, helpful guidance (three by my count). Have a nice day.
DC parent here with two kids who've negotiated process...NY parent offers great guidance. I don't have an issue with the NY "attitude", because parents often need a wake up call. The process is a challenge and going in eyes open is critical. There is a ton of misinformation out there particularly on this forum. Different HA, even within Ivies, have different standards and it's profoundly foolish to bank on test optional next year. Good luck to y'all, glad my family is done.
True. 100%.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Waiting on the NY parent and other test optional denier parent to respond with an accept/
reject of this PP’s experience…..
The NY parent (me) authored the post above re: test optionals. And if you read everything I’ve written closely (you should be able to detect my style) you’ll see I’ve been entirely consistent. Other people have written that ivies are not test optional. A quick Google search shows that’s not true as a matter of *policy*. It’s the encouragement / expectation of these coaches to have their recruits test to make them stronger admission candidates that’s at issue. And that’s why, as I’ve explained, these ivy test-optionals aren’t really optional.
You seem to be the only one with an axe to grind here. You’ve offered nothing constructive to this discussion. Others have complimented me for providing detailed, helpful guidance (three by my count). Have a nice day.
DC parent here with two kids who've negotiated process...NY parent offers great guidance. I don't have an issue with the NY "attitude", because parents often need a wake up call. The process is a challenge and going in eyes open is critical. There is a ton of misinformation out there particularly on this forum. Different HA, even within Ivies, have different standards and it's profoundly foolish to bank on test optional next year. Good luck to y'all, glad my family is done.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Waiting on the NY parent and other test optional denier parent to respond with an accept/
reject of this PP’s experience…..
The NY parent (me) authored the post above re: test optionals. And if you read everything I’ve written closely (you should be able to detect my style) you’ll see I’ve been entirely consistent. Other people have written that ivies are not test optional. A quick Google search shows that’s not true as a matter of *policy*. It’s the encouragement / expectation of these coaches to have their recruits test to make them stronger admission candidates that’s at issue. And that’s why, as I’ve explained, these ivy test-optionals aren’t really optional.
You seem to be the only one with an axe to grind here. You’ve offered nothing constructive to this discussion. Others have complimented me for providing detailed, helpful guidance (three by my count). Have a nice day.
Anonymous wrote:Check out the college forum, lots of info on this. When it comes to top academic schools the “test optional” policy only applies to first-gen, URM, and poor kids. If you are white and UMC and/or go to private school, these colleges expect test scores. You won’t get in without high test scores. The unspoken truth is the so called “test optional” is only for the kids who have familial or historical obstacles to gaining admission. This applies doubly to athletic recruits of rich people sports like lacrosse.