Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you tell us for those of you who got in the school/scores? Is it a barb with a 1450 and 3.8? Or are we talking tip top?
3.85 private
test optional.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you tell us for those of you who got in the school/scores? Is it a barb with a 1450 and 3.8? Or are we talking tip top?
3.85 private
test optional.
Anonymous wrote:I am a professor and the idea of strategic position is so nauseating to me that I feel like writing a letter to our admissions office to let them know about what I read in this forum and others.
To be clear, I am not attacking the OP. She did what she felt she had to do to benefit her child. However, favoring students with unusual niche interests is clearly not the best way to find the most authentic students. Maybe this approach was more authentic 10 years ago before college admissions officers and parents pushed it en masse, but clearly this is no longer the way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a professor and the idea of strategic position is so nauseating to me that I feel like writing a letter to our admissions office to let them know about what I read in this forum and others.
To be clear, I am not attacking the OP. She did what she felt she had to do to benefit her child. However, favoring students with unusual niche interests is clearly not the best way to find the most authentic students. Maybe this approach was more authentic 10 years ago before college admissions officers and parents pushed it en masse, but clearly this is no longer the way.
professors are all about strategic positioning
They want the kids with the genuine interests, not the ones cultivated by parents and admissions counselors.
The point being made is that they often underestimate how far kids game the system without parents or counselors. Any smart kid can research and pick up college admissions trend nowadays, reddit, dcum, or better yet gpt. Kids, especially the "driven" kids, understand what it takes to get there. No one lives in vaccum, simply labeling something "genuine" just because parents didn't participate is somewhat naive.
Anonymous wrote:We are fortunate to have a daughter who was accepted to all of the HYPSM schools back in 2025. We are unhooked in every aspect of the word.
I am not here to engage with people who call me a troll or try to discredit the premise of the post; I am laying the facts of our experience down and you may choose whether or not you want to believe me. Quite frankly, I don't care if you don't believe me. If you choose to believe the post, I hope that it will be useful. I am also not here to discuss ethics.
It seems to me that the best way to get into these schools, nowadays, is to use what I call now a 'barb' instead of a 'spike.' What this means is to go all-in (extracurriculars, essays, classes) on one incredibly, incredibly niche field. This departs from the typical sense of a 'spike' in that a spike is far too broad. Spikes are often synonymous with a field of study: computer science, environmental science, politics, healthcare, etc. But a barb is far spikier than a spike. It means that you must specialize within that spike. Spikes have now become well-rounded, and well-rounded applicants have become rejects.
So, you could choose to go 'all-in' on ways that Native Americans interact with the environment. Or go all-in on compilers in computer science. Or spend your time lobbying for laws that challenge deceptive interrogation tactics. Or architecture in hospitals. Or a specific gene in the ostrich genome (this one's probably too specific Hahaha).
In a way, we found success by targeting all of our daughter's ECs at that one particular topic. This leaves no question for the AO as to what place the student will take on campus, what labs they will engage in, what classes they will take, what clubs they will join, and what their future looks like. It's makes your regional AO's job (advocating for you in committee) incredibly easy, because they can just refer to you as "that student who is interested in making exonerees" or "that student who has a deep passion for colonial Japan's rise" or "that student who has worked on protest theory for years."
Barbs also lend themselves to great awards to put on an application. Such deep intellectual rigor, research, and involvement is often rewarded.
And this might be a little unethical: what sweetens the deal at these schools is that you can change your major before you even arrive on campus. There is no commitment to any of these barbs. No self-respecting person is going to major in Inuit cosmologies, but a self-respecting high schooler may very well choose their barb in that field.
This is also a very high-variance strategy. If rejected by all T10s (or whatever), you may be stuck studying political science at UMD or UConn. This strategy has been very successful in recent years, but that's of course anecdotal.
Curious to hear thoughts, questions, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Any suggestions for activities and how to make a ābarbā for a student at MCPS magnet that is interested in STEM with focus on environmental science /environmental engineering/ marine biology/conservation/environmental policy ? Still trying to focus but open to any suggestions. Student is in 10 th grade now. Thanks!
Anonymous wrote: I mean, Harvard has bills to pay too. So theyāll gladly take money from insecure and obviously wealthy parents who can pay to involve their dc in activities that boost their application prospects. Itās all so gross but you do you. And then they can say they are āneed blindā too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My unhooked kid is at an Ivy and this just sounds so sick.
He just did the things he loved. By Fall of Senior year, you could see a pattern. His ānarrativeā (even hate that - blah) was easily pieced together.
We never āpackagedā our kids or gunned for anything. They were naturally motivated/smart and always got As, top scores without us doing anything. Both were heavily into a sport they were not recruited for as well (did get re ruined for very low academic, tiny schools).
It might very well work, OP. But doing this and telling kids to just change once they are on campus just feels so creepy to me.
same w my two kids at HYP now. unhooked. no spike or barb developed during HS. but quantifiable results in school: elected to school positions, won major debate/MUN/mock trial events on state or national level. They both pieced together unique career interests out of what they had done/read/studied/did a summer thing related to so they would be memorable in a committee meeting: Northern Virginia kid interested in post-nuclear war/low light agriculture. also won state MUN tournament, elected president of 250-member service club, and has a 36 on the ACT.
I want to say I know what that means, but I don't.
This is clearly bizzard/weird.
If HYP is into this kind of stuff but not kids who have more mainstream interests, there is a problem.
it's a real field of study. it's okay if you haven't heard of it, but that doesn't make it "weird"
Low-light agriculture is a critical area of study regarding both mitigating climate change and preparing for potential catastrophes like nuclear winter. While nuclear energy acts as a low-carbon, high-efficiency power source to support sustainable, high-tech farming and food security, a, nuclear war could trigger severe climate change, leading to global "nuclear winter" conditions, which would severely restrict light for agriculture.
World Nuclear Association
Low-Light Agriculture and Nuclear War (Nuclear Winter)
A large-scale nuclear war could produce massive amounts of soot, blocking up to 95-99% of sunlight, resulting in freezing temperatures, reduced precipitation, and minimal crop production for years.
The Pennsylvania State University
Reduced Yields: A nuclear winter could cause an 80% drop in annual corn yields.
Alternative Crops: Research indicates that in a low-light catastrophe, certain crops, such as sugar beets and spinach in temperate regions, would be more viable, while tropical forests might offer limited food production due to slightly better conditions.
Emergency Solutions: The most promising, though challenging, food solutions include mushrooms, seaweed, and the rapid scaling of greenhouses (using timber, plastic film) for some, though not enough, food.
Nutrient Challenges: The combination of low light and high ultraviolet (UV) radiation from a destroyed ozone layer would severely damage plant tissue.
The Pennsylvania State University
Nuclear Technology in Climate-Resilient Agriculture
Nuclear science, specifically through the Joint FAO/IAEA Centre, helps agriculture adapt to climate change:
Mutation Breeding: Techniques like irradiation (e.g., gamma rays or ion beams) are used to develop "climate-proof" crops, such as heat-tolerant rice in Bangladesh and drought-tolerant beans in Cuba.
Water and Soil Management: Isotopes are used to track water movement and improve efficiency in irrigation and fertilizer use, reducing greenhouse gas emissions by up to 50%.
Food Security: Food irradiation is used to extend the shelf life of produce and manage pests.
International Atomic Energy Agency
Nuclear Power for Sustainable Agriculture
Nuclear energy supports sustainable agriculture by providing reliable, low-carbon, baseload electricity.
World Nuclear Association
Clean Energy Transition: Nuclear energy is essential for meeting climate goals (e.g., Net Zero) by substituting for high-carbon fossil fuels.
Controlled Environment Agriculture: While vertical farming is energy-intensive, nuclear power could potentially supply the electricity needed for high-tech, artificial light, or "electro-agriculture" systems that can produce food in low-light environments.
Risks: However, climate change itself poses risks to nuclear infrastructure; in a high-emission scenario (RCP 8.5), up to 91% of nuclear reactors could face significant ambient temperature increases, affecting cooling capacities by 2040.
International Atomic Energy Agency
Okay, that's all good.
Are your kids at HYP majoring in low light ag or nuclear ag? Or are they doing econ right now? Be honest.
Anonymous wrote:Can you tell us for those of you who got in the school/scores? Is it a barb with a 1450 and 3.8? Or are we talking tip top?