Anonymous wrote:Getting shot down by an aunt before she even applies will damage her self esteem and ambition for a long time.
Reaching for the stars with full encouragement of her family is a good thing, even if the college ultimately doesn't accept her.
I was rejected from one "reach" school, and accepted to the other reach school and my safeties. Don't regret that strategy at all. I still reach for things that are probably overly ambitious, and I think it has served me well in life.
Anonymous wrote:I have a son with mostly As and a few Bs. His SAT scores were good, but not spectacular.
He played football all 4 years and did no other extracurriculars.
I can't tell you how many people in the past six months, when talking to him about college, told him how "uninteresting" he was.
It's an incredibly hurtful thing to say to a teen. And mean. Cruel.
Mind your business. The kid will find his way like every other kid, without your "help".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Harvard looks for geographic diversity. She might be a stronger candidate than you think. Regardless, MYOB.
lets call this for what it is.
geographic affirmative action.
and it needs to go away.
Anonymous wrote:I'm surprised to read how many people are OK with some naive brat pissing away $1000 of her family's modest income. Most families in the U.S. don't have $1000 for an EMERGENCY and this girl is lighting it on fire because she's too stupid to realize in the grand scheme of things she's JUST an average white girl.
Anonymous wrote:I'm surprised to read how many people are OK with some naive brat pissing away $1000 of her family's modest income. Most families in the U.S. don't have $1000 for an EMERGENCY and this girl is lighting it on fire because she's too stupid to realize in the grand scheme of things she's JUST an average white girl.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She'll be lucky to get into Penn State. Not even kidding.
Seriously? She'll get into plenty of decent schools, just not Harvard.
Anonymous wrote:Getting shot down by an aunt before she even applies will damage her self esteem and ambition for a long time.
Reaching for the stars with full encouragement of her family is a good thing, even if the college ultimately doesn't accept her.
I was rejected from one "reach" school, and accepted to the other reach school and my safeties. Don't regret that strategy at all. I still reach for things that are probably overly ambitious, and I think it has served me well in life.