Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Probably outdated here on some of these but here’s some wild guesses:
UMiami
Tulane
GWU
Syracuse
Hobart and William Smith
Connecticut College
U of Vermont
Trinity College
Penn State
Hampden-Sydney
Mount Holyoke
Tulane had an admit rate for the '25 class of 9.73%. They dropped their honors college because the caliber of student is growing by leaps and bounds.
Tulane's SATs look really stellar, but they became SAT optional a few years ago--any word on how many student actually submit SATs there?
This list is dead on for “schools rich families won’t be embarrassed to send their kids. Add all SEC schools, Sewanee, UC Boulder TCU and SMU - lots of different levels of students at these schools with a rich undercurrent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Probably outdated here on some of these but here’s some wild guesses:
UMiami
Tulane
GWU
Syracuse
Hobart and William Smith
Connecticut College
U of Vermont
Trinity College
Penn State
Hampden-Sydney
Mount Holyoke
Tulane had an admit rate for the '25 class of 9.73%. They dropped their honors college because the caliber of student is growing by leaps and bounds.
Tulane's SATs look really stellar, but they became SAT optional a few years ago--any word on how many student actually submit SATs there?
This list is dead on for “schools rich families won’t be embarrassed to send their kids. Add all SEC schools, Sewanee, UC Boulder TCU and SMU - lots of different levels of students at these schools with a rich undercurrent.
Also Baylor, Rhodes, U of Denver
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I once would have said NYU, Boston U, CU Boulder or USC but no more.
Chapman
Santa Clara?
Gettysburg College
CU Boulder is easier to get into than Santa Clara and maybe even Gettysburg.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Probably outdated here on some of these but here’s some wild guesses:
UMiami
Tulane
GWU
Syracuse
Hobart and William Smith
Connecticut College
U of Vermont
Trinity College
Penn State
Hampden-Sydney
Mount Holyoke
Tulane had an admit rate for the '25 class of 9.73%. They dropped their honors college because the caliber of student is growing by leaps and bounds.
Tulane's SATs look really stellar, but they became SAT optional a few years ago--any word on how many student actually submit SATs there?
This list is dead on for “schools rich families won’t be embarrassed to send their kids. Add all SEC schools, Sewanee, UC Boulder TCU and SMU - lots of different levels of students at these schools with a rich undercurrent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Probably outdated here on some of these but here’s some wild guesses:
UMiami
Tulane
GWU
Syracuse
Hobart and William Smith
Connecticut College
U of Vermont
Trinity College
Penn State
Hampden-Sydney
Mount Holyoke
Tulane had an admit rate for the '25 class of 9.73%. They dropped their honors college because the caliber of student is growing by leaps and bounds.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Probably outdated here on some of these but here’s some wild guesses:
UMiami
Tulane
GWU
Syracuse
Hobart and William Smith
Connecticut College
U of Vermont
Trinity College
Penn State
Hampden-Sydney
Mount Holyoke
Tulane had an admit rate for the '25 class of 9.73%. They dropped their honors college because the caliber of student is growing by leaps and bounds.
Tulane's SATs look really stellar, but they became SAT optional a few years ago--any word on how many student actually submit SATs there?
Anonymous wrote:In addition to many schools already mentioned (+1 for Rollins, Miami OH, and Indiana), some people send their dumb rich kids to places like Lesley University or St. Mary's (the idea being that their child might snag a spouse at nearby Harvard or Notre Dame). Or someplace overseas that sounds glamorous but isn't very selective, like American University of Paris.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Probably outdated here on some of these but here’s some wild guesses:
UMiami
Tulane
GWU
Syracuse
Hobart and William Smith
Connecticut College
U of Vermont
Trinity College
Penn State
Hampden-Sydney
Mount Holyoke
Tulane had an admit rate for the '25 class of 9.73%. They dropped their honors college because the caliber of student is growing by leaps and bounds.
Anonymous wrote:Probably outdated here on some of these but here’s some wild guesses:
UMiami
Tulane
GWU
Syracuse
Hobart and William Smith
Connecticut College
U of Vermont
Trinity College
Penn State
Hampden-Sydney
Mount Holyoke
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I’m saying what if a UC kid gets a 1100 SAT and is a C student. What do they do in 2021?
I have an average student. He got mainly B and C grades. He only received an A in PE and some other electives he was able to pick. Core classes, the ones he was required to take for graduation that he had zero interest in, he received a C. Those he had a bit of interest in, like history, he'd get a B.
Anyway, his SAT was just slightly higher than that at 1240. He hates taking long standardized tests. His GPA when applying was 2.3 and his end of the year GPA was 2.4.
Here are the colleges he applied to and the results:
JMU (waitlisted - he didn't want to go here, but his girlfriend wanted him to apply b/c she's going there)
GMU (waitlisted then accepted)
WVU - accepted
CNU - accepted
ODU - accepted
LSU - accepted
Pitt - accepted
Univ. of Kansas - accepted
Co. State Univ. - accepted
FSU (his reach) - rejected
So, as you can see, there are still some decent universities for average students.
OP - very helpful - TY for sharing.
What? I’m the actual OP. Lol.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I’m saying what if a UC kid gets a 1100 SAT and is a C student. What do they do in 2021?
If you are really that well-off then your kids probably aren't ever going to get C's. The concept of the "gentleman's C" grade is in the distant past. All a wealthy parent has to do is get tutors to have the tutor do the work for their child, help their child, or pressure the private school into giving B's . Or they are having their child assessed and getting accommodations if they start getting C's. So maybe the wealthy parent can't increase the SAT score if their child really is average, but they can absolutely influence grades.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The UC don't use the "side door," like in Varsity Blues.
They just give big dollar donations directly to the school in exchange for admission, aka "the front door."
What made Varsity Blues so bad was that the schools were victims of the fraud. People were getting in for a lot cheaper than the "front door" method.
Personally, I think federal funding should be suspended for any university that considers legacy or donations in its admissions process.
+ 1
Jared Kushner is below average academically. His doucebag criminal father gave $2.5 million. He remained a below average student and human.
Anonymous wrote:The UC don't use the "side door," like in Varsity Blues.
They just give big dollar donations directly to the school in exchange for admission, aka "the front door."
What made Varsity Blues so bad was that the schools were victims of the fraud. People were getting in for a lot cheaper than the "front door" method.
Personally, I think federal funding should be suspended for any university that considers legacy or donations in its admissions process.
Anonymous wrote:I once would have said NYU, Boston U, CU Boulder or USC but no more.
Chapman
Santa Clara?
Gettysburg College