Anonymous wrote:DD is pretty neurotic and a high scorer on exams but simply lacks extracurriculars. She aspires to be a physicist and in her free time, she’s president of the Quantum physics and robotics team. I’m concerned that without going to a top 20 university, she won’t be able to ever achieve her dream. Looking through the assistant professor page at Princeton, every one of them has a degree from MIT, Stanford, Tsinghua, and IIT, so what chance does she have getting into the professsion?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What does the Quantum Physics team do? Are there competitions?
There are and there aren't.
No way to know for sure until you try to watch one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What does the Quantum Physics team do? Are there competitions?
There are and there aren't.
No way to know for sure until you try to watch one.
Anonymous wrote:What does the Quantum Physics team do? Are there competitions?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What does the Quantum Physics team do? Are there competitions?
Competitions would require multiple schools with quantum physics teams. Which I doubt exist. There aren't even that many regular physics teams, though those likely do at least exist.
I'm guessing this child made up a quantum physics team so that way on their college apps they can brag about "founding a club." Convince a few classmates who know nothing about physics to join. Meet once in a rare while to talk about something. And then exaggerate to colleges about how great it is. At which point the interviewer and/or admissions person calls BS.
No one is bragging about doing quantum physics- most people think it’s a total bore.
I get tired of parents here trampling students with any level of passion, just because their kids do the same robotic Extracurriculars as everyone else.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What does the Quantum Physics team do? Are there competitions?
Competitions would require multiple schools with quantum physics teams. Which I doubt exist. There aren't even that many regular physics teams, though those likely do at least exist.
I'm guessing this child made up a quantum physics team so that way on their college apps they can brag about "founding a club." Convince a few classmates who know nothing about physics to join. Meet once in a rare while to talk about something. And then exaggerate to colleges about how great it is. At which point the interviewer and/or admissions person calls BS.
- how does a HS kid know which such certainty that they want to have a career in physics research? This is not something they typically have exposure to with enough regularity to know. What experiences allowed your DC to decide this path?
Exactly. I don't know why we are all wasting our time responding to this thread. This person has no clue.
The same way literally any other child has a career idea in mind. People like you are so useless and add nothing to these threads
Anonymous wrote:What does the Quantum Physics team do? Are there competitions?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: - how does a HS kid know which such certainty that they want to have a career in physics research? This is not something they typically have exposure to with enough regularity to know. What experiences allowed your DC to decide this path?
Exactly. I don't know why we are all wasting our time responding to this thread. This person has no clue.
Anonymous wrote: - how does a HS kid know which such certainty that they want to have a career in physics research? This is not something they typically have exposure to with enough regularity to know. What experiences allowed your DC to decide this path?