Anonymous wrote:OP you sound jealous or like you want to unearth a lie. Why not swim your own lane and don't worry about these people?
Anonymous wrote:I think it was incumbent upon you to go to your friend's house, knock on their door, and demand of them to reveal their embarassingly low SAT score.
Who are they fooling? Hopefully, armed with this information you cant make up a sandwich board and parade around your town letting everyone know what's happening.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t know anything about division 3 schools and athletic recruiting. Is this possible?
They are on the lower end of upper middle class. No hooks. Their senior is a good not great athlete. And not an especially noteworthy student. She was not in the most advanced AP courses and her parents kept having her retake the ACT and SAT because her scores were so mediocre. Best ACT sitting was 26 and she was too embarrassed to reveal SAT scores.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this for real? OP how do you know all this?
PS - 26 is perfectly acceptable ACT score for many colleges
My child got lower and went T30 because of sports. People hate athletes.
People “hate” athletes because many would have absolutely no chance getting accepted to highly selective schools on their academic achievements, while our kids excel beyond belief and acceptance (not to mention scholarships) to these same highly selective schools are a lottery. My kid excels both in a niche sport, musical instrument AND academics.
you want a gold star, d-bag?
Ehhh, everybody would prefer having a kid who can perform surgery over a kid that can kick a ball far. No need to be butt hurt your kid falls into the latter.
lol. PP thinks med schools are full of people that never played a sport or something.
Able to “kick a ball far” and able to become a surgeon are not anywhere near mutually exclusive.
An average athlete who can't handle AP courses and took multiple attempts on the ACT to eke out a 26 is not going to medical school. Maybe like a nursing school candidate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this for real? OP how do you know all this?
PS - 26 is perfectly acceptable ACT score for many colleges
My child got lower and went T30 because of sports. People hate athletes.
People “hate” athletes because many would have absolutely no chance getting accepted to highly selective schools on their academic achievements, while our kids excel beyond belief and acceptance (not to mention scholarships) to these same highly selective schools are a lottery. My kid excels both in a niche sport, musical instrument AND academics.
You're actually teaching your own lesson here. Kids have to become the best version of themselves. Colleges need a wide variety of such kids. Some of them will be great students. Some of them will be great athletes. No kid can check every box. If the schools you want don't seem to value your kid, try shopping different schools. I did so myself, and it turned out better than I could have imagined.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Plenty of small, not prestigious, not selective D3 schools give everybody tons of merit aid.
D3 schools can't give sports scholarships, but I assume this family is betting that you don't know that so that is why they are bragging this way.
It is possible that they receive some extra merit aid compared to the next person for some leadership award or something like that which mysteriously always goes to athletes.
If a coach gets the student merit aid it’s essentially a sports scholarship.
Sure they don’t call it that. Loophole.
I know a recruited athlete whose twin was awarded the full ride. NESCAC. You kind of have to admire the school for working that particular loophole.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this for real? OP how do you know all this?
+1 Good reminder not to share too much about your kids. This kid's parents probably thought they were commiserating with a friend over her testing and now she's on here talking about the girl like she's an idiot because she doesn't want to believe anything good could have happened for her. Gross.
Don't put it on social media, don't participate in the college athletic commitment ceremony in the high school gym, and don't spread falsehoods to other parents about your kid's alleged full ride scholarship to a small division 3 college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this for real? OP how do you know all this?
PS - 26 is perfectly acceptable ACT score for many colleges
My child got lower and went T30 because of sports. People hate athletes.
People “hate” athletes because many would have absolutely no chance getting accepted to highly selective schools on their academic achievements, while our kids excel beyond belief and acceptance (not to mention scholarships) to these same highly selective schools are a lottery. My kid excels both in a niche sport, musical instrument AND academics.
you want a gold star, d-bag?
Ehhh, everybody would prefer having a kid who can perform surgery over a kid that can kick a ball far. No need to be butt hurt your kid falls into the latter.
lol. PP thinks med schools are full of people that never played a sport or something.
Able to “kick a ball far” and able to become a surgeon are not anywhere near mutually exclusive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this for real? OP how do you know all this?
PS - 26 is perfectly acceptable ACT score for many colleges
My child got lower and went T30 because of sports. People hate athletes.
People “hate” athletes because many would have absolutely no chance getting accepted to highly selective schools on their academic achievements, while our kids excel beyond belief and acceptance (not to mention scholarships) to these same highly selective schools are a lottery. My kid excels both in a niche sport, musical instrument AND academics.
you want a gold star, d-bag?
Ehhh, everybody would prefer having a kid who can perform surgery over a kid that can kick a ball far. No need to be butt hurt your kid falls into the latter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ffs, either congratulate them or mind your own business.
Why would you congratulate someone who is lying to your face?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the choice is small school in the middle of nowhere for free or small school in the middle of nowhere for 50k a year it doesn't matter if you are UMC, paying for college in scenario is asanine and quite frankly none of your business. They throw money at kids for a reason, D3 sports is not a cakewalk... all of the extra time and energy for none of the great facilities and playing for nobody. It's basically club ball with a lot of parents in folding chairs on the grass. I know one kid that went to play at some no-name school with 400 students and they had to farm their own food. They were miserable.
Name the school or it didn't happen. And the school can't be Berea.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Plenty of small, not prestigious, not selective D3 schools give everybody tons of merit aid.
D3 schools can't give sports scholarships, but I assume this family is betting that you don't know that so that is why they are bragging this way.
It is possible that they receive some extra merit aid compared to the next person for some leadership award or something like that which mysteriously always goes to athletes.
If a coach gets the student merit aid it’s essentially a sports scholarship.
Sure they don’t call it that. Loophole.
I know a recruited athlete whose twin was awarded the full ride. NESCAC. You kind of have to admire the school for working that particular loophole.