Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Or it means a kid has a SSN and they’re filling out their college application?
The CA prompt explicitly says to only include SSN if applying for financial aid. It’s crystal clear folks.
No, the prompt says "Social Security Number, required if applying for financial aid via FAFSA"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Or it means a kid has a SSN and they’re filling out their college application?
The CA prompt explicitly says to only include SSN if applying for financial aid. It’s crystal clear folks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Or it means a kid has a SSN and they’re filling out their college application?
The CA prompt explicitly says to only include SSN if applying for financial aid. It’s crystal clear folks.
Anonymous wrote:Or it means a kid has a SSN and they’re filling out their college application?
Anonymous wrote:I hadn't heard not to put SSN in order to signal full pay. We are full pay and my kids did not include SSN simply to avoid giving SSN where it is not needed.
Two JD family and we put employment. It is already obvious that we are full pay.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah, I listened to that podcast bc it was recommended here. It was a waste of an hour. I laughed out loud when he said 2 spaces after a period will give away that a parent edited the essay.![]()
Yes! Hilarious. As if admissions officers are parsing things down to that level of detail 😂
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah, I listened to that podcast bc it was recommended here. It was a waste of an hour. I laughed out loud when he said 2 spaces after a period will give away that a parent edited the essay.![]()
Yes! Hilarious. As if admissions officers are parsing things down to that level of detail 😂
Anonymous wrote:Yeah, I listened to that podcast bc it was recommended here. It was a waste of an hour. I laughed out loud when he said 2 spaces after a period will give away that a parent edited the essay.![]()
Anonymous wrote:^ these same kids received “lower”acceptances in RD to washU, vanderbilt, georgetown, northwestern, emory, wake, BC, W&M, Michigan OOS, GT and many many more….
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a bad take. Seeing your parents work in CS and exposing you to hackathons in 5th grade is totally great
It’s not so great to say you have an internship at Stars Hallow Realty when mom or dad works there. That’s true. But it’s totally fine to say you work there for pay. Especially if you can describe a for pay job that makes sense for your age.
I would definitely not do this if you have a high household income. It reeks of privilege.
The issues with the major isn’t that it’s not noble or fine to follow in your parents footsteps. It is.
I think the argument is that compared to other candidates, it may not be as creative , interesting, unique what have you.
And again his entire argument if it’s even true is only relevant for T-20 schools