Anonymous wrote:My 8th grader was asked what his first choice school was ... he named a different school. Got in anyway, but we were sure that would be reject.
Anonymous wrote:When asked if they could have lunch with anyone living or dead responded Tonya Harding.
I am confident that admissions person had a great story to share at dinner that night. (If nothing else it was a unique response - right?)
Anonymous wrote:Conducted the interview in Spanish.
My child is not fluent in Spanish.
I am conversational, and the HOS was fluent.
She started asking questions in Spanish, and my child (8) answered in complete sentences, but the answers did not match the questions.
HOS:Where do you live?
My kid: I have 1 brother.
HOS: Do you have a dog?
My kid: I eat grapes.
She asked me, in Spanish, if I knew how poorly this was going.
Claro.
That did not end in "thick envelope" way.
Anonymous wrote:Conducted the interview in Spanish.
My child is not fluent in Spanish.
I am conversational, and the HOS was fluent.
She started asking questions in Spanish, and my child (8) answered in complete sentences, but the answers did not match the questions.
HOS:Where do you live?
My kid: I have 1 brother.
HOS: Do you have a dog?
My kid: I eat grapes.
She asked me, in Spanish, if I knew how poorly this was going.
Claro.
That did not end in "thick envelope" way.
Anonymous wrote:Conducted the interview in Spanish.
My child is not fluent in Spanish.
I am conversational, and the HOS was fluent.
She started asking questions in Spanish, and my child (8) answered in complete sentences, but the answers did not match the questions.
HOS:Where do you live?
My kid: I have 1 brother.
HOS: Do you have a dog?
My kid: I eat grapes.
She asked me, in Spanish, if I knew how poorly this was going.
Claro.
That did not end in "thick envelope" way.
Anonymous wrote:Conducted the interview in Spanish.
My child is not fluent in Spanish.
I am conversational, and the HOS was fluent.
She started asking questions in Spanish, and my child (8) answered in complete sentences, but the answers did not match the questions.
HOS:Where do you live?
My kid: I have 1 brother.
HOS: Do you have a dog?
My kid: I eat grapes.
She asked me, in Spanish, if I knew how poorly this was going.
Claro.
That did not end in "thick envelope" way.
Anonymous wrote:My 10 year old was being interviewed by middle school admissions when his 8 year old sister decided to unplug our internet and we lost connection. It was pretty rough for him to get started again. We were waitlisted...
Anonymous wrote:When asked if they could have lunch with anyone living or dead responded Tonya Harding.
I am confident that admissions person had a great story to share at dinner that night. (If nothing else it was a unique response - right?)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I appreciate your sense of humor and ability to poke fun at yourself. Everyone else is taking the light-hearted comments way too seriously!
I think during an online interview last year I may have overheard my middle schooler say her favorite activity was watching tv. She still got it at that school.
That is great. I have told my DS that he can not mention Xbox EVER in an interview or essay when they ask him what he likes to do outside of school. So much for teaching my kid honesty!
This is silly…he’s a kid (and I’m afraid to ask how young you started him on this path)…he plays Xbox (all the kids do!). Privates are not authentic, it’s all about window dressing…