Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid was burnt out from the pressures of a W high school, so she chose a lower ranked school to get out of the pressure cooker . Being a big fish in a small pond helped her blossom. I am proud that she could make that choice.
Lol she “chose” it. It wasn’t chosen for her. Sure. Ok.
Yeah, she turned down six more highly ranked schools. You can’t picture that I know.
No, she didn’t. You’re full of it. There’s not a college student in America who chose their 7th ranked choice. Name the schools she turned down and the one she selected.
Why would I lie to a stranger on the internet? My kid's list is not important (nor would I consider providing "proof" to win your confidence in the truth of my post.)
You need to seriously consider why you cannot compute the FACT that a family might have different priorities than you/yours.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid was burnt out from the pressures of a W high school, so she chose a lower ranked school to get out of the pressure cooker . Being a big fish in a small pond helped her blossom. I am proud that she could make that choice.
Lol she “chose” it. It wasn’t chosen for her. Sure. Ok.
Yeah, she turned down six more highly ranked schools. You can’t picture that I know.
No, she didn’t. You’re full of it. There’s not a college student in America who chose their 7th ranked choice. Name the schools she turned down and the one she selected.
Anonymous wrote:A note to other posters. Yes, I know that many students turn down a higher ranked school for a lower ranked one. Mine did, turning down a top 5-7 school for a top 15 for a large merit aid package. What I’m questioning is a student who turned down six schools ranked higher than the one selected. If this really happened, it’s only because the other six weren’t particularly highly ranked - so it made no difference. Once you hit second tier, whatever.
That’s my point.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP here. I’ll also add that As in college these days are not “relatively rare.” The average GPA at most colleges is well over a 3.0.
Nice try.
That is a far cry from large public high schools where 600+ kids have over a 4.0, my defensive friend.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How many of the posters whose kids are having adjustment problems sent their kids to small, expensive private high schools? I’ll bet it’s the majority.
It is the opposite because the kids from large public schools are suddenly thrust into a place with far less grade inflation. It is a gigantic shock to go from a school where 1/2 of the kids have above a 4.0 to one where As are comparatively rare.
No one is talking about academics. We’re talking about adjusting socially. You might want to actually read the discussion going on in this thread.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid was burnt out from the pressures of a W high school, so she chose a lower ranked school to get out of the pressure cooker . Being a big fish in a small pond helped her blossom. I am proud that she could make that choice.
Lol she “chose” it. It wasn’t chosen for her. Sure. Ok.
Yeah, she turned down six more highly ranked schools. You can’t picture that I know.
No, she didn’t. You’re full of it. There’s not a college student in America who chose their 7th ranked choice. Name the schools she turned down and the one she selected.
NP. Your imaginary world is so weird. What a strange person you are, untethered to any reality. Of course that is what OPs kid did. It’s very common. Ask any admissions counselor. I worked in admissions and saw kids routinely choose much lower-ranked schools, often over a list of higher ones.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid was burnt out from the pressures of a W high school, so she chose a lower ranked school to get out of the pressure cooker . Being a big fish in a small pond helped her blossom. I am proud that she could make that choice.
Lol she “chose” it. It wasn’t chosen for her. Sure. Ok.
Yeah, she turned down six more highly ranked schools. You can’t picture that I know.
) . If that school had been a normal semester school it could easily be where they are attending college as a freshman Anonymous wrote:PP here. I’ll also add that As in college these days are not “relatively rare.” The average GPA at most colleges is well over a 3.0.
Nice try.
Anonymous wrote:Not sure about super happy, but happy and not regretting her choice. She'd make the same choice again. Has made 2 friends, as a quiet introvert she moves slower, which is all she feels she needs currently. Participates in clubs in which she feels comfy with friendly members.
Academically happy, as she figured out after 1. midterm how to adjust note taking and how to learn for classes effectively. likes all her classes and Professors and easy office hours. Got a job on campus that works out great.
Tere are so many adjustments they all go thru in the first semester.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid was burnt out from the pressures of a W high school, so she chose a lower ranked school to get out of the pressure cooker . Being a big fish in a small pond helped her blossom. I am proud that she could make that choice.
Lol she “chose” it. It wasn’t chosen for her. Sure. Ok.
Yeah, she turned down six more highly ranked schools. You can’t picture that I know.
No, she didn’t. You’re full of it. There’s not a college student in America who chose their 7th ranked choice. Name the schools she turned down and the one she selected.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How many of the posters whose kids are having adjustment problems sent their kids to small, expensive private high schools? I’ll bet it’s the majority.
It is the opposite because the kids from large public schools are suddenly thrust into a place with far less grade inflation. It is a gigantic shock to go from a school where 1/2 of the kids have above a 4.0 to one where As are comparatively rare.
Anonymous wrote:How many of the posters whose kids are having adjustment problems sent their kids to small, expensive private high schools? I’ll bet it’s the majority.
Anonymous wrote:How many of the posters whose kids are having adjustment problems sent their kids to small, expensive private high schools? I’ll bet it’s the majority.