Anonymous wrote:You will be fine. SEC with those stats is easy other than Vanderbilt. Look for scholarship money from Alabama.
Anonymous wrote:Wisconsin is not a safety school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Great suggestions in this thread, thanks.
Did any of you encourage your student to include rolling admission schools on their likely list, and apply to them as early as possible?
PITT is it.
We kept going back and forth on Pitt but after visiting, it’s now one of DS’s top choice schools. It’s really good to like your safeties!
My high stats kid is not thrilled with Pitt as a safety. Any suggestions of other safeties/rolling admit schools? Not interested in huge state schools, not interested in Greek life, prefers East Coast, nerdy kids who wants challenge.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here- with TO it seems that the test scores of admitted students will be skewed much higher because only kids with high test scores will be submitting them, right? And I have heard that Naviance is only as good as how up to date your school admin keeps it, correct?
I hope the SATS scores are skewing high and will come back to earth before my 10 & 11th graders apply. The 11th grader is practice testing around 1390 & with a weighted 4.0, and against current college stats, his “safeties” are looking more like super “reaches”. Regarding naviance, the high schools I’m aware of are good at keeping that up to date.
I hope so too (for my 11th grader) but realistically the only way that will happen is if more schools (like MIT) revert to non-optional. So many schools have not announced their plans for the fall 2023 application cycle (current juniors) -- BC and Villanova are two that come to mind -- so I'll be curious to see whether they, or schools of similar selectivity, start requiring scores again.
Actually, many schools have announced their plans: test optional.
If you're going to take the SAT, just factor in higher scores since only applicants with high scores will submit.
After the SCOTUS bans affirmative action in the upcoming cases, test optional will likely be the norm anyways.
There won't be any clear / definitive advantage to having a high SAT score. The SAT is already a lower stakes test in today's college admissions environment.
I agree that the significance of an SAT scores ain't what it used to be by any means. But as long as the scores submitted by applicants are made public, and are available on the many college related websites, colleges will want those scores to be as high as practical. (Some people will continue to believe that the higher the average scores, the more selective and prestigious the school.) Thus there will still be value in a strong SAT score.
For a test optional school, how so?
Test optional is not really test optional. It basically allows the school to do whatever they want without objective criteria. So, if you have some characteristic that the school wants (demographics, a 4.3 40 yard, a great 3pt shot, a father that donated a library), then don't submit tests. If you don't have these things, you better have very high test scores.
To be blunt, if you are white and not first-generation you need to have top grades and submit scores if you want to get into a top school.
+100 This.
Oh, look: Dumb agrees with Dumber.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here- with TO it seems that the test scores of admitted students will be skewed much higher because only kids with high test scores will be submitting them, right? And I have heard that Naviance is only as good as how up to date your school admin keeps it, correct?
I hope the SATS scores are skewing high and will come back to earth before my 10 & 11th graders apply. The 11th grader is practice testing around 1390 & with a weighted 4.0, and against current college stats, his “safeties” are looking more like super “reaches”. Regarding naviance, the high schools I’m aware of are good at keeping that up to date.
I hope so too (for my 11th grader) but realistically the only way that will happen is if more schools (like MIT) revert to non-optional. So many schools have not announced their plans for the fall 2023 application cycle (current juniors) -- BC and Villanova are two that come to mind -- so I'll be curious to see whether they, or schools of similar selectivity, start requiring scores again.
Actually, many schools have announced their plans: test optional.
If you're going to take the SAT, just factor in higher scores since only applicants with high scores will submit.
After the SCOTUS bans affirmative action in the upcoming cases, test optional will likely be the norm anyways.
There won't be any clear / definitive advantage to having a high SAT score. The SAT is already a lower stakes test in today's college admissions environment.
I agree that the significance of an SAT scores ain't what it used to be by any means. But as long as the scores submitted by applicants are made public, and are available on the many college related websites, colleges will want those scores to be as high as practical. (Some people will continue to believe that the higher the average scores, the more selective and prestigious the school.) Thus there will still be value in a strong SAT score.
For a test optional school, how so?
Test optional is not really test optional. It basically allows the school to do whatever they want without objective criteria. So, if you have some characteristic that the school wants (demographics, a 4.3 40 yard, a great 3pt shot, a father that donated a library), then don't submit tests. If you don't have these things, you better have very high test scores.
To be blunt, if you are white and not first-generation you need to have top grades and submit scores if you want to get into a top school.
+100 This.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here- with TO it seems that the test scores of admitted students will be skewed much higher because only kids with high test scores will be submitting them, right? And I have heard that Naviance is only as good as how up to date your school admin keeps it, correct?
I hope the SATS scores are skewing high and will come back to earth before my 10 & 11th graders apply. The 11th grader is practice testing around 1390 & with a weighted 4.0, and against current college stats, his “safeties” are looking more like super “reaches”. Regarding naviance, the high schools I’m aware of are good at keeping that up to date.
I hope so too (for my 11th grader) but realistically the only way that will happen is if more schools (like MIT) revert to non-optional. So many schools have not announced their plans for the fall 2023 application cycle (current juniors) -- BC and Villanova are two that come to mind -- so I'll be curious to see whether they, or schools of similar selectivity, start requiring scores again.
Actually, many schools have announced their plans: test optional.
If you're going to take the SAT, just factor in higher scores since only applicants with high scores will submit.
After the SCOTUS bans affirmative action in the upcoming cases, test optional will likely be the norm anyways.
There won't be any clear / definitive advantage to having a high SAT score. The SAT is already a lower stakes test in today's college admissions environment.
I agree that the significance of an SAT scores ain't what it used to be by any means. But as long as the scores submitted by applicants are made public, and are available on the many college related websites, colleges will want those scores to be as high as practical. (Some people will continue to believe that the higher the average scores, the more selective and prestigious the school.) Thus there will still be value in a strong SAT score.
For a test optional school, how so?
Test optional is not really test optional. It basically allows the school to do whatever they want without objective criteria. So, if you have some characteristic that the school wants (demographics, a 4.3 40 yard, a great 3pt shot, a father that donated a library), then don't submit tests. If you don't have these things, you better have very high test scores.
To be blunt, if you are white and not first-generation you need to have top grades and submit scores if you want to get into a top school.
+100 This.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here- with TO it seems that the test scores of admitted students will be skewed much higher because only kids with high test scores will be submitting them, right? And I have heard that Naviance is only as good as how up to date your school admin keeps it, correct?
I hope the SATS scores are skewing high and will come back to earth before my 10 & 11th graders apply. The 11th grader is practice testing around 1390 & with a weighted 4.0, and against current college stats, his “safeties” are looking more like super “reaches”. Regarding naviance, the high schools I’m aware of are good at keeping that up to date.
I hope so too (for my 11th grader) but realistically the only way that will happen is if more schools (like MIT) revert to non-optional. So many schools have not announced their plans for the fall 2023 application cycle (current juniors) -- BC and Villanova are two that come to mind -- so I'll be curious to see whether they, or schools of similar selectivity, start requiring scores again.
Actually, many schools have announced their plans: test optional.
If you're going to take the SAT, just factor in higher scores since only applicants with high scores will submit.
After the SCOTUS bans affirmative action in the upcoming cases, test optional will likely be the norm anyways.
There won't be any clear / definitive advantage to having a high SAT score. The SAT is already a lower stakes test in today's college admissions environment.
I agree that the significance of an SAT scores ain't what it used to be by any means. But as long as the scores submitted by applicants are made public, and are available on the many college related websites, colleges will want those scores to be as high as practical. (Some people will continue to believe that the higher the average scores, the more selective and prestigious the school.) Thus there will still be value in a strong SAT score.
For a test optional school, how so?
Test optional is not really test optional. It basically allows the school to do whatever they want without objective criteria. So, if you have some characteristic that the school wants (demographics, a 4.3 40 yard, a great 3pt shot, a father that donated a library), then don't submit tests. If you don't have these things, you better have very high test scores.
To be blunt, if you are white and not first-generation you need to have top grades and submit scores if you want to get into a top school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP analysis would be a lot better with stats.
Current Junior
Latino
3.9 UW
No Test Scores yet (taking SAT in March)
Jv/Varsity football since Freshman year
JV basketball 10th grade
PT jobs in summer
No volunteer activities in 9th due to covid. Some last year (special olympics and HS booster club), but planning on much more once football season is over in December.
Looking at mostly large state schools in the SEC, with a couple others thrown in once he finds matches and likelies.
He's a strong applicant. Intended major? And, if STEM, current math and science classes?
He wants to do business
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP analysis would be a lot better with stats.
Current Junior
Latino
3.9 UW
No Test Scores yet (taking SAT in March)
Jv/Varsity football since Freshman year
JV basketball 10th grade
PT jobs in summer
No volunteer activities in 9th due to covid. Some last year (special olympics and HS booster club), but planning on much more once football season is over in December.
Looking at mostly large state schools in the SEC, with a couple others thrown in once he finds matches and likelies.
He's a strong applicant. Intended major? And, if STEM, current math and science classes?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can someone name a handful of “likely/safeties” that very good stats kids would really like (looking at kids who would not seriously be considered at a top 25 school - so 4.0ish). For example, South Carolina seemed like a “favorite safety” from DS’s school last year (but I do not know what their stats).
You would look at public colleges excluding the public ivies, geographic preference of your kid (East Coast, South, Midwest), taking into account in-state vs OOS acceptance rates and any OOS caps, the competitiveness of the major, and college experience (i.e. if they want a big football school, greek life etc. and financial affordability. Popular ones from this area are Delaware, Pitt, Wisconsin, South Carolina and maybe JMU or VT depending on major and state residency.
Anonymous wrote:Several on DS list happen to be rolling so I am going to encourage him to apply as soon as they open in August (he is a junior). My one concern is his HS counseling says to allow "at least three weeks" for all rolling admission schools for transcripts, etc. to be sent and there is very little action in the summer months so he might have to wait until September for them to be complete.
Anonymous wrote:Can someone name a handful of “likely/safeties” that very good stats kids would really like (looking at kids who would not seriously be considered at a top 25 school - so 4.0ish). For example, South Carolina seemed like a “favorite safety” from DS’s school last year (but I do not know what their stats).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here- with TO it seems that the test scores of admitted students will be skewed much higher because only kids with high test scores will be submitting them, right? And I have heard that Naviance is only as good as how up to date your school admin keeps it, correct?
I hope the SATS scores are skewing high and will come back to earth before my 10 & 11th graders apply. The 11th grader is practice testing around 1390 & with a weighted 4.0, and against current college stats, his “safeties” are looking more like super “reaches”. Regarding naviance, the high schools I’m aware of are good at keeping that up to date.
I hope so too (for my 11th grader) but realistically the only way that will happen is if more schools (like MIT) revert to non-optional. So many schools have not announced their plans for the fall 2023 application cycle (current juniors) -- BC and Villanova are two that come to mind -- so I'll be curious to see whether they, or schools of similar selectivity, start requiring scores again.