Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For a 4.0 uw with 8 APs total, 1500 sat, boy, stem major, fine ec but not astounding. Not catholic.
BC will care about what he got on those AP exams. 5s across the board put him in a solid position. A 1500 from an UMC kid at a private school is fine, but not really strong. The 4.0 is impossible for us to judge without know the school. The APs may get him across the line.
Lol, no. APs aren’t that important when it comes to college admissions. But a 1500 is more than fine.
Anonymous wrote:That's why DS is applying ED.
Anonymous wrote:BC is over-priced and over-hyped
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For a 4.0 uw with 8 APs total, 1500 sat, boy, stem major, fine ec but not astounding. Not catholic.
BC will care about what he got on those AP exams. 5s across the board put him in a solid position. A 1500 from an UMC kid at a private school is fine, but not really strong. The 4.0 is impossible for us to judge without know the school. The APs may get him across the line.
Anonymous wrote:For a 4.0 uw with 8 APs total, 1500 sat, boy, stem major, fine ec but not astounding. Not catholic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD got accepted ED to BC and will be starting in the fall. We just got back from orientation. We are not Catholic and I really think it’s misleading that it’s a huge focus. They focus on Jesuit beliefs. They pointed out numerous times that it is a university, not a church and don’t care if you are religious or not. Sure, there were kids there from Catholic HS, but there were just as many who were not. Service is a huge thing for BC. You need to demonstrate service to your community and the supplemental essay that’s required is a great way to show that. Also, high SAT scores 1500+ seemed to be common among kids that were accepted ED. Best of luck!
The BC website says religious affiliation is “important” (ranked equivalent to ECs and service etc) so that sounds like a huge focus to me.
What it says on the website and the reality are two very different things in our experience.
It’s on the CDS. Have you found that the CDS does not reflect reality? How do?
You’re doing this intentionally, right? Being dense?
I haven’t seen anything convincing that demonstrates that colleges in general or BC in particular lie on the CDS. Nor is there any incentive for BC to say religious affiliation is “important” on the CDS if that’s not true. But I’m sure a smart person like you can prove otherwise. I’ll wait!
It can be "important" for purposes of the CDS and "not a huge focus" as pps have tried to say, but you won't accept.
"My DD got accepted ED to BC and will be starting in the fall. We just got back from orientation. We are not Catholic and I really think it’s misleading that it’s a huge focus. They focus on Jesuit beliefs. They pointed out numerous times that it is a university, not a church and don’t care if you are religious or not. Sure, there were kids there from Catholic HS, but there were just as many who were not. Service is a huge thing for BC. You need to demonstrate service to your community and the supplemental essay that’s required is a great way to show that. Also, high SAT scores 1500+ seemed to be common among kids that were accepted ED. Best of luck!"
No, of course I won't accept one anecdote from some anon on DCUM. If the CDS says religion is "important" then they obviously do care if you are religious. If they didn't care, then they'd mark religious affiliation as "not considered".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD got accepted ED to BC and will be starting in the fall. We just got back from orientation. We are not Catholic and I really think it’s misleading that it’s a huge focus. They focus on Jesuit beliefs. They pointed out numerous times that it is a university, not a church and don’t care if you are religious or not. Sure, there were kids there from Catholic HS, but there were just as many who were not. Service is a huge thing for BC. You need to demonstrate service to your community and the supplemental essay that’s required is a great way to show that. Also, high SAT scores 1500+ seemed to be common among kids that were accepted ED. Best of luck!
The BC website says religious affiliation is “important” (ranked equivalent to ECs and service etc) so that sounds like a huge focus to me.
What it says on the website and the reality are two very different things in our experience.
It’s on the CDS. Have you found that the CDS does not reflect reality? How do?
You’re doing this intentionally, right? Being dense?
I haven’t seen anything convincing that demonstrates that colleges in general or BC in particular lie on the CDS. Nor is there any incentive for BC to say religious affiliation is “important” on the CDS if that’s not true. But I’m sure a smart person like you can prove otherwise. I’ll wait!
It can be "important" for purposes of the CDS and "not a huge focus" as pps have tried to say, but you won't accept.
"My DD got accepted ED to BC and will be starting in the fall. We just got back from orientation. We are not Catholic and I really think it’s misleading that it’s a huge focus. They focus on Jesuit beliefs. They pointed out numerous times that it is a university, not a church and don’t care if you are religious or not. Sure, there were kids there from Catholic HS, but there were just as many who were not. Service is a huge thing for BC. You need to demonstrate service to your community and the supplemental essay that’s required is a great way to show that. Also, high SAT scores 1500+ seemed to be common among kids that were accepted ED. Best of luck!"
No, of course I won't accept one anecdote from some anon on DCUM. If the CDS says religion is "important" then they obviously do care if you are religious. If they didn't care, then they'd mark religious affiliation as "not considered".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD got accepted ED to BC and will be starting in the fall. We just got back from orientation. We are not Catholic and I really think it’s misleading that it’s a huge focus. They focus on Jesuit beliefs. They pointed out numerous times that it is a university, not a church and don’t care if you are religious or not. Sure, there were kids there from Catholic HS, but there were just as many who were not. Service is a huge thing for BC. You need to demonstrate service to your community and the supplemental essay that’s required is a great way to show that. Also, high SAT scores 1500+ seemed to be common among kids that were accepted ED. Best of luck!
The BC website says religious affiliation is “important” (ranked equivalent to ECs and service etc) so that sounds like a huge focus to me.
What it says on the website and the reality are two very different things in our experience.
It’s on the CDS. Have you found that the CDS does not reflect reality? How do?
You’re doing this intentionally, right? Being dense?
I haven’t seen anything convincing that demonstrates that colleges in general or BC in particular lie on the CDS. Nor is there any incentive for BC to say religious affiliation is “important” on the CDS if that’s not true. But I’m sure a smart person like you can prove otherwise. I’ll wait!
It can be "important" for purposes of the CDS and "not a huge focus" as pps have tried to say, but you won't accept.
"My DD got accepted ED to BC and will be starting in the fall. We just got back from orientation. We are not Catholic and I really think it’s misleading that it’s a huge focus. They focus on Jesuit beliefs. They pointed out numerous times that it is a university, not a church and don’t care if you are religious or not. Sure, there were kids there from Catholic HS, but there were just as many who were not. Service is a huge thing for BC. You need to demonstrate service to your community and the supplemental essay that’s required is a great way to show that. Also, high SAT scores 1500+ seemed to be common among kids that were accepted ED. Best of luck!"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD got accepted ED to BC and will be starting in the fall. We just got back from orientation. We are not Catholic and I really think it’s misleading that it’s a huge focus. They focus on Jesuit beliefs. They pointed out numerous times that it is a university, not a church and don’t care if you are religious or not. Sure, there were kids there from Catholic HS, but there were just as many who were not. Service is a huge thing for BC. You need to demonstrate service to your community and the supplemental essay that’s required is a great way to show that. Also, high SAT scores 1500+ seemed to be common among kids that were accepted ED. Best of luck!
The BC website says religious affiliation is “important” (ranked equivalent to ECs and service etc) so that sounds like a huge focus to me.
What it says on the website and the reality are two very different things in our experience.
It’s on the CDS. Have you found that the CDS does not reflect reality? How do?
You’re doing this intentionally, right? Being dense?
I haven’t seen anything convincing that demonstrates that colleges in general or BC in particular lie on the CDS. Nor is there any incentive for BC to say religious affiliation is “important” on the CDS if that’s not true. But I’m sure a smart person like you can prove otherwise. I’ll wait!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD got accepted ED to BC and will be starting in the fall. We just got back from orientation. We are not Catholic and I really think it’s misleading that it’s a huge focus. They focus on Jesuit beliefs. They pointed out numerous times that it is a university, not a church and don’t care if you are religious or not. Sure, there were kids there from Catholic HS, but there were just as many who were not. Service is a huge thing for BC. You need to demonstrate service to your community and the supplemental essay that’s required is a great way to show that. Also, high SAT scores 1500+ seemed to be common among kids that were accepted ED. Best of luck!
The BC website says religious affiliation is “important” (ranked equivalent to ECs and service etc) so that sounds like a huge focus to me.
What it says on the website and the reality are two very different things in our experience.
It’s on the CDS. Have you found that the CDS does not reflect reality? How do?
You’re doing this intentionally, right? Being dense?
Anonymous wrote:And pls keep in mind that BC is Jesuit and all that entails (positives as far was we're concerned). DS wouldn't be going there if it was Catholic, not Jesuit. Jesuits are much more open, accepting and inviting, with a focus on service, as many have mentioned.
Anonymous wrote:And pls keep in mind that BC is Jesuit and all that entails (positives as far was we're concerned). DS wouldn't be going there if it was Catholic, not Jesuit. Jesuits are much more open, accepting and inviting, with a focus on service, as many have mentioned.