Anonymous wrote:West Point is such a niche school though. It is so easy to say something like, “DC has decided the service commitment after graduation is too much” or “DC doesn’t want to join the military after all.”
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Since I'm being accused of lying, for whatever it's worth, the higher tier school they're harping on is West Point. Yes, people do get weird about it because of its history and low acceptance rate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tell those family members to EAD. What's so hard about that?
Maybe if it's a drunk uncle you're not close with, but not if it's your kid's well-meaning but tactless grandparent. Would you really tell your own mom to EAD?
Anonymous wrote:Tell those family members to EAD. What's so hard about that?
tAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Actually, i'm so proud of DC for investing the time and effort to find a school that seems to have the best fit of exactly what they're looking for, and not just following the herd to the colleges with the most applications or the lowest acceptance rates."
Snarky. I love it.
Anonymous wrote:DC's top choice college was a "lessor" school in a particular group - think Cornell vs. Harvard or Connecticut College vs. Amherst, or Nebraska vs. Northwestern, something like that. They were accepted and are THRILLED beyond words, but more than one family member and friend has said some really nasty things to us about the acceptance. We're incredibly proud and trying to gracefully deflect the comments, but people are digging in their heels and saying the equivalent of, "Well, what about Harvard? It's not too late to apply, you know."
Could use some specific wording here. "This school is perfect for them, and we're very proud of their achievement" isn't shutting them down.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I guess I wasn't clear that DC didn't even APPLY to the higher tier schools, because they weren't interested. These friends and family can't wrap their minds around that. So it's less of them not understanding modern admissions and more of them not understand why DC would self-select into a "lessor" school. And I really have no idea how to reply to that beside, "That's what they wanted." Which clearly isn't working.
I don’t believe you.
I believe OP, bc we had a really hard time finding reaches for my kid. She applied to only one reach under urging from counselor. The rest targets or safeties. Sometimes it’s like this. Believe it or don’t.
That’s not the part I don’t believe. I don’t believe she’s getting this much flack from so many family members and friends. I just don’t buy it. I’ve said this in the past and ruffled her feathers and she reported me and had it deleted, but I think much of this is in her head.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ah. Then make it clear that your kid felt a strong connection to their school, while also making it clear that your kid knew about other options (and didn't just pick the first school where there was a fun tour).
Especially if you can point out things they were drawn to, like "Jane loved the new high-tech science building at School X, plus the fact that she could double-major in neuroscience and Japanese."
If Rude Person mentions Elite School X, say "Oh, sure, we looked into it* — but Chosen School was the best match."
(*even if you never actually toured)
Helpful, thanks. It's definitely a very specific program they can't get at the other schools. Which...they know and still disagree with, but whatever.
This is a useful fact to throw back at the rude people: "So why do you think DC should apply to a school that doesn't offer their major?"