Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^^Don’t give them a dime ever again! These stories are terrible. Think schools will regret this behavior in the future once the coffers run dry!!
They won't get a penny ever again. The grandparent that taught there is literally writing them out of their will today. It was a six figure donation. It's the internet so no one will believe me. Reaction from my undergrad friends is bad, bad, bad. I had kids first in the group and we all assumed she was a shoe in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, the days of legacy admission are fully over.
My DD was denied yesterday, despite both parents and one grandparent graduating undergrad.
One parent also got an MBA there, one grandparent got their JD there and one grandparent taught there for 15 years.
What's that, 6 hooks?
Stats weren't perfect (obviously), but were on par for a gimme admission.
She wasn't going to go even if she got in but I have to admit to being shocked.
This. My kid is a legacy + more than two decades as a professor.
Well I guess there were kids more qualified---better scores, grades, ECs and essays. Maybe the tide is changing and GU is backing off its really ridiculous stance on legacy where any distant connection--a grad or law or whatever was considered enough to propel someone over a candidate that had no hooks.
My kid had very high stats and I thought a great package but you’re right- for whatever reason, kid was rejected. Legacy didn’t matter nor was it a crappy package and we were relying on legacy to push it thru.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, the days of legacy admission are fully over.
My DD was denied yesterday, despite both parents and one grandparent graduating undergrad.
One parent also got an MBA there, one grandparent got their JD there and one grandparent taught there for 15 years.
What's that, 6 hooks?
Stats weren't perfect (obviously), but were on par for a gimme admission.
She wasn't going to go even if she got in but I have to admit to being shocked.
This. My kid is a legacy + more than two decades as a professor.
Well I guess there were kids more qualified---better scores, grades, ECs and essays. Maybe the tide is changing and GU is backing off its really ridiculous stance on legacy where any distant connection--a grad or law or whatever was considered enough to propel someone over a candidate that had no hooks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, the days of legacy admission are fully over.
My DD was denied yesterday, despite both parents and one grandparent graduating undergrad.
One parent also got an MBA there, one grandparent got their JD there and one grandparent taught there for 15 years.
What's that, 6 hooks?
Stats weren't perfect (obviously), but were on par for a gimme admission.
She wasn't going to go even if she got in but I have to admit to being shocked.
Grad school alum isn't a hook and unless your family was given 6-7 figure gifts, then being a legacy really isn't a hook.
And she wasn't going to go and that probably reflected in her essays and interview.
So you shouldn't really be shocked.
Her interviewer was a lesbian woman in a hotel lobby who basically crapped on my DD's many athletic achievements and spent the 15 minutes big upping 'diversity.'
It was garbage.
What does the interviewer being a lesbian have to do with anything?
It has everything to do with it. They paired her with someone quite opposite of her and not familiar with her life circumstances.
If I said my DD were black, urban and liberal and they paired her with a white male rural conservative you'd agree it was inappropriate.
THIS HAPPENS EVERYWHERE. My son had mostly women, minorites and trans or other sexualities for all of his interviews at Ivies/SLACs/GU, etc.
If your kid can't handle interviewing with someone that is not exactly like them or doesn't know their life story, well that right there shows you that maybe they aren't cut out for it.
Schools look for kids that can handle anything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, the days of legacy admission are fully over.
My DD was denied yesterday, despite both parents and one grandparent graduating undergrad.
One parent also got an MBA there, one grandparent got their JD there and one grandparent taught there for 15 years.
What's that, 6 hooks?
Stats weren't perfect (obviously), but were on par for a gimme admission.
She wasn't going to go even if she got in but I have to admit to being shocked.
Grad school alum isn't a hook and unless your family was given 6-7 figure gifts, then being a legacy really isn't a hook.
And she wasn't going to go and that probably reflected in her essays and interview.
So you shouldn't really be shocked.
Her interviewer was a lesbian woman in a hotel lobby who basically crapped on my DD's many athletic achievements and spent the 15 minutes big upping 'diversity.'
It was garbage.
What does the interviewer being a lesbian have to do with anything?
It has everything to do with it. They paired her with someone quite opposite of her and not familiar with her life circumstances.
If I said my DD were black, urban and liberal and they paired her with a white male rural conservative you'd agree it was inappropriate.
THIS HAPPENS EVERYWHERE. My son had mostly women, minorites and trans or other sexualities for all of his interviews at Ivies/SLACs/GU, etc.
If your kid can't handle interviewing with someone that is not exactly like them or doesn't know their life story, well that right there shows you that maybe they aren't cut out for it.
Schools look for kids that can handle anything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, the days of legacy admission are fully over.
My DD was denied yesterday, despite both parents and one grandparent graduating undergrad.
One parent also got an MBA there, one grandparent got their JD there and one grandparent taught there for 15 years.
What's that, 6 hooks?
Stats weren't perfect (obviously), but were on par for a gimme admission.
She wasn't going to go even if she got in but I have to admit to being shocked.
Grad school alum isn't a hook and unless your family was given 6-7 figure gifts, then being a legacy really isn't a hook.
And she wasn't going to go and that probably reflected in her essays and interview.
So you shouldn't really be shocked.
Her interviewer was a lesbian woman in a hotel lobby who basically crapped on my DD's many athletic achievements and spent the 15 minutes big upping 'diversity.'
It was garbage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, the days of legacy admission are fully over.
My DD was denied yesterday, despite both parents and one grandparent graduating undergrad.
One parent also got an MBA there, one grandparent got their JD there and one grandparent taught there for 15 years.
What's that, 6 hooks?
Stats weren't perfect (obviously), but were on par for a gimme admission.
She wasn't going to go even if she got in but I have to admit to being shocked.
Grad school alum isn't a hook and unless your family was given 6-7 figure gifts, then being a legacy really isn't a hook.
And she wasn't going to go and that probably reflected in her essays and interview.
So you shouldn't really be shocked.
Her interviewer was a lesbian woman in a hotel lobby who basically crapped on my DD's many athletic achievements and spent the 15 minutes big upping 'diversity.'
It was garbage.
What does the interviewer being a lesbian have to do with anything?
It has everything to do with it. They paired her with someone quite opposite of her and not familiar with her life circumstances.
If I said my DD were black, urban and liberal and they paired her with a white male rural conservative you'd agree it was inappropriate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, the days of legacy admission are fully over.
My DD was denied yesterday, despite both parents and one grandparent graduating undergrad.
One parent also got an MBA there, one grandparent got their JD there and one grandparent taught there for 15 years.
What's that, 6 hooks?
Stats weren't perfect (obviously), but were on par for a gimme admission.
She wasn't going to go even if she got in but I have to admit to being shocked.
This. My kid is a legacy + more than two decades as a professor.
Anonymous wrote:The interviewer assignments are completely random - no one is getting matched up with people who have the same "life experiences." I've done GU alum interviews.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, the days of legacy admission are fully over.
My DD was denied yesterday, despite both parents and one grandparent graduating undergrad.
One parent also got an MBA there, one grandparent got their JD there and one grandparent taught there for 15 years.
What's that, 6 hooks?
Stats weren't perfect (obviously), but were on par for a gimme admission.
She wasn't going to go even if she got in but I have to admit to being shocked.
Grad school alum isn't a hook and unless your family was given 6-7 figure gifts, then being a legacy really isn't a hook.
And she wasn't going to go and that probably reflected in her essays and interview.
So you shouldn't really be shocked.
Her interviewer was a lesbian woman in a hotel lobby who basically crapped on my DD's many athletic achievements and spent the 15 minutes big upping 'diversity.'
It was garbage.
What does the interviewer being a lesbian have to do with anything?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, the days of legacy admission are fully over.
My DD was denied yesterday, despite both parents and one grandparent graduating undergrad.
One parent also got an MBA there, one grandparent got their JD there and one grandparent taught there for 15 years.
What's that, 6 hooks?
Stats weren't perfect (obviously), but were on par for a gimme admission.
She wasn't going to go even if she got in but I have to admit to being shocked.
Grad school alum isn't a hook and unless your family was given 6-7 figure gifts, then being a legacy really isn't a hook.
And she wasn't going to go and that probably reflected in her essays and interview.
So you shouldn't really be shocked.
Her interviewer was a lesbian woman in a hotel lobby who basically crapped on my DD's many athletic achievements and spent the 15 minutes big upping 'diversity.'
It was garbage.
What does the interviewer being a lesbian have to do with anything?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, the days of legacy admission are fully over.
My DD was denied yesterday, despite both parents and one grandparent graduating undergrad.
One parent also got an MBA there, one grandparent got their JD there and one grandparent taught there for 15 years.
What's that, 6 hooks?
Stats weren't perfect (obviously), but were on par for a gimme admission.
She wasn't going to go even if she got in but I have to admit to being shocked.
Grad school alum isn't a hook and unless your family was given 6-7 figure gifts, then being a legacy really isn't a hook.
And she wasn't going to go and that probably reflected in her essays and interview.
So you shouldn't really be shocked.
Her interviewer was a lesbian woman in a hotel lobby who basically crapped on my DD's many athletic achievements and spent the 15 minutes big upping 'diversity.'
It was garbage.
Anonymous wrote:Well, the days of legacy admission are fully over.
My DD was denied yesterday, despite both parents and one grandparent graduating undergrad.
One parent also got an MBA there, one grandparent got their JD there and one grandparent taught there for 15 years.
What's that, 6 hooks?
Stats weren't perfect (obviously), but were on par for a gimme admission.
She wasn't going to go even if she got in but I have to admit to being shocked.
Anonymous wrote:Well, the days of legacy admission are fully over.
My DD was denied yesterday, despite both parents and one grandparent graduating undergrad.
One parent also got an MBA there, one grandparent got their JD there and one grandparent taught there for 15 years.
What's that, 6 hooks?
Stats weren't perfect (obviously), but were on par for a gimme admission.
She wasn't going to go even if she got in but I have to admit to being shocked.