Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op - What about Miami University in Ohio as a safety? It’s ranked 103 and they have formulaic merit aid that will get your student in-state or full-tuition.
I highly doubt that's what OP is looking for
Why? What's wrong with Miami Ohio?
Nothing wrong. It is just that op was looking for a top 50 school
^
A top 50 school can’t be a true safety for any student who’s not famous for doing something like being a president’s grandchild.
I think it’s way better for an applicant who gets shut out of T50 schools to swallow hard and go to the University of Kansas, which is a wonderful research university in a blue town, than to spend a gap year playing Minecraft.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lehigh
That is an interesting idea. It was not on my radar, kids from our school don’t apply there
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UVA if s/he is truly outstanding.
Not if they are a VA resident. My niece was accepted to 2 Ivies and rejected from UVA. She went to Hopkins for Med school.
UVA is weird for in-state students.
There is no such a safety that can GUARANTEE your admission. It's all relative.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UVA if s/he is truly outstanding.
Not if they are a VA resident. My niece was accepted to 2 Ivies and rejected from UVA. She went to Hopkins for Med school.
UVA is weird for in-state students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UVA if s/he is truly outstanding.
Not if they are a VA resident. My niece was accepted to 2 Ivies and rejected from UVA. She went to Hopkins for Med school.
UVA is weird for in-state students.
The year I was waitlisted, Scalia's son was rejected. I was ranked #10 out of 450 students at a Fairfax Co HS and high SATS, varsity athlete all 4-years, youngest NHS, etc. I think everything happens for a reason though--I am not that 'type'. I would have hated it there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UVA if s/he is truly outstanding.
Not if they are a VA resident. My niece was accepted to 2 Ivies and rejected from UVA. She went to Hopkins for Med school.
UVA is weird for in-state students.
Anonymous wrote:UVA if s/he is truly outstanding.
. My niece was accepted to 2 Ivies and rejected from UVA. She went to Hopkins for Med school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op - What about Miami University in Ohio as a safety? It’s ranked 103 and they have formulaic merit aid that will get your student in-state or full-tuition.
I highly doubt that's what OP is looking for
Why? What's wrong with Miami Ohio?
Nothing wrong. It is just that op was looking for a top 50 school
^
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op - What about Miami University in Ohio as a safety? It’s ranked 103 and they have formulaic merit aid that will get your student in-state or full-tuition.
I highly doubt that's what OP is looking for
Why? What's wrong with Miami Ohio?
Nothing wrong. It is just that op was looking for a top 50 school
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op - What about Miami University in Ohio as a safety? It’s ranked 103 and they have formulaic merit aid that will get your student in-state or full-tuition.
I highly doubt that's what OP is looking for
Why? What's wrong with Miami Ohio?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op - What about Miami University in Ohio as a safety? It’s ranked 103 and they have formulaic merit aid that will get your student in-state or full-tuition.
I highly doubt that's what OP is looking for
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What would be a safety for a high stats kid from DC (4.0 unweighted, 35 ACT)?
Reach for a top 15 national university (NU) or top 5 SLAC; aim/target 15-50 NU or 5-15 SLAC; safety 50-100 NU or 16-30 SLAC.
If safety means a greater than 75% chance of acceptance then it can easily be a t30-50 school for a kid with high stats from a strong HS with rigorous curriculum
The problem with this strategy is that any private school in the top 100 might be unpredictable about how it handles being treated as a safety.
I think one requirement for a safety for a high-stats kid is that it takes all reasonably well-behaved high-stats kids.
So your high-stats kid would go to a national university rated lower than 100? If so, they should be getting a full-ride.