Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To me the key question is: do the elite universities basically have quotas for each school? With 1 kid in college and another on the way, I've noticed patterns like this.
So if Yale takes 2-3 kid from each school, that's good news for the 15 Yale applicants at St. Albans. It's pretty crummy news for the 40 Yale applicants at Walt Whitman. Even if 15 of the Whitman kids are stellar applicants, there's no way Yale is going to take all 15 from Whitman when there are good kids next door at BCC. So in this completely hypothetical example, St. Alban's acceptance rate is 3/15 = 20% and Whitman's acceptance rate is 3/40= 7.5%.
No they do not have quota. Yale took 10 from Sidwell last year. The idea that your kid will suffer because he/she goes to a competitive high school with lots of applicants is bogus.
Anonymous wrote:To me the key question is: do the elite universities basically have quotas for each school? With 1 kid in college and another on the way, I've noticed patterns like this.
So if Yale takes 2-3 kid from each school, that's good news for the 15 Yale applicants at St. Albans. It's pretty crummy news for the 40 Yale applicants at Walt Whitman. Even if 15 of the Whitman kids are stellar applicants, there's no way Yale is going to take all 15 from Whitman when there are good kids next door at BCC. So in this completely hypothetical example, St. Alban's acceptance rate is 3/15 = 20% and Whitman's acceptance rate is 3/40= 7.5%.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To me the key question is: do the elite universities basically have quotas for each school? With 1 kid in college and another on the way, I've noticed patterns like this.
So if Yale takes 2-3 kid from each school, that's good news for the 15 Yale applicants at St. Albans. It's pretty crummy news for the 40 Yale applicants at Walt Whitman. Even if 15 of the Whitman kids are stellar applicants, there's no way Yale is going to take all 15 from Whitman when there are good kids next door at BCC. So in this completely hypothetical example, St. Alban's acceptance rate is 3/15 = 20% and Whitman's acceptance rate is 3/40= 7.5%.
No they do not have quota. Yale took 10 from Sidwell last year. The idea that your kid will suffer because he/she goes to a competitive high school with lots of applicants is bogus.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To me the key question is: do the elite universities basically have quotas for each school? With 1 kid in college and another on the way, I've noticed patterns like this.
So if Yale takes 2-3 kid from each school, that's good news for the 15 Yale applicants at St. Albans. It's pretty crummy news for the 40 Yale applicants at Walt Whitman. Even if 15 of the Whitman kids are stellar applicants, there's no way Yale is going to take all 15 from Whitman when there are good kids next door at BCC. So in this completely hypothetical example, St. Alban's acceptance rate is 3/15 = 20% and Whitman's acceptance rate is 3/40= 7.5%.
No they do not have quota. Yale took 10 from Sidwell last year. The idea that your kid will suffer because he/she goes to a competitive high school with lots of applicants is bogus.
Of course it is. If it were true, people would be pulling their kids from Sidwell or Whitman to enroll their kids at Wheaton or Kennedy. Haven't seen much of that, have we?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To me the key question is: do the elite universities basically have quotas for each school? With 1 kid in college and another on the way, I've noticed patterns like this.
So if Yale takes 2-3 kid from each school, that's good news for the 15 Yale applicants at St. Albans. It's pretty crummy news for the 40 Yale applicants at Walt Whitman. Even if 15 of the Whitman kids are stellar applicants, there's no way Yale is going to take all 15 from Whitman when there are good kids next door at BCC. So in this completely hypothetical example, St. Alban's acceptance rate is 3/15 = 20% and Whitman's acceptance rate is 3/40= 7.5%.
No they do not have quota. Yale took 10 from Sidwell last year. The idea that your kid will suffer because he/she goes to a competitive high school with lots of applicants is bogus.
Anonymous wrote:To me the key question is: do the elite universities basically have quotas for each school? With 1 kid in college and another on the way, I've noticed patterns like this.
So if Yale takes 2-3 kid from each school, that's good news for the 15 Yale applicants at St. Albans. It's pretty crummy news for the 40 Yale applicants at Walt Whitman. Even if 15 of the Whitman kids are stellar applicants, there's no way Yale is going to take all 15 from Whitman when there are good kids next door at BCC. So in this completely hypothetical example, St. Alban's acceptance rate is 3/15 = 20% and Whitman's acceptance rate is 3/40= 7.5%.