Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dean J keeps stressing that UVA does a holistic review.
But in reality all they look at is course selection ( did u take the hardest courses) and what grades did u get.
So is the “holistic” part just an act to be like a more “elite” school?
They are serious about rigor. Engineering applicant from NOVA with 4.5 and 1560 was waitlisted. Maxed out on math, history and science APs but did not bother to take Lang or lit. I warned him! Thats okay. 3rd year at UMD with a Google internship summer of 26.
This is where I get really annoyed with UVA admissions. I say that as an alum and as a parent of a kid who just applied. Your kid sounds great and it's UVA's loss. My kid also maxxed out on AP classes in most subjects, BUT he stopped taking a foreign language to do it. The classes he wanted to take wouldn't all fit if he took it so he made a choice. We supported him following his interests. We'll see what UVA does.
They say what they want and then you get mad when their decision reflects that? We all know they consider language a core subject.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dean J keeps stressing that UVA does a holistic review.
But in reality all they look at is course selection ( did u take the hardest courses) and what grades did u get.
So is the “holistic” part just an act to be like a more “elite” school?
They are serious about rigor. Engineering applicant from NOVA with 4.5 and 1560 was waitlisted. Maxed out on math, history and science APs but did not bother to take Lang or lit. I warned him! Thats okay. 3rd year at UMD with a Google internship summer of 26.
This wording is really telling. If your kid is dismissive of any particular core subject area, that’s not what they’re looking for (at least not in A&S). They want well-rounded and curious. They don’t admit to major because they don’t expect a 17 year old should be so sure yet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dean J keeps stressing that UVA does a holistic review.
But in reality all they look at is course selection ( did u take the hardest courses) and what grades did u get.
So is the “holistic” part just an act to be like a more “elite” school?
They are serious about rigor. Engineering applicant from NOVA with 4.5 and 1560 was waitlisted. Maxed out on math, history and science APs but did not bother to take Lang or lit. I warned him! Thats okay. 3rd year at UMD with a Google internship summer of 26.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dean J keeps stressing that UVA does a holistic review.
But in reality all they look at is course selection ( did u take the hardest courses) and what grades did u get.
So is the “holistic” part just an act to be like a more “elite” school?
They are serious about rigor. Engineering applicant from NOVA with 4.5 and 1560 was waitlisted. Maxed out on math, history and science APs but did not bother to take Lang or lit. I warned him! Thats okay. 3rd year at UMD with a Google internship summer of 26.
This is where I get really annoyed with UVA admissions. I say that as an alum and as a parent of a kid who just applied. Your kid sounds great and it's UVA's loss. My kid also maxxed out on AP classes in most subjects, BUT he stopped taking a foreign language to do it. The classes he wanted to take wouldn't all fit if he took it so he made a choice. We supported him following his interests. We'll see what UVA does.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Of course Dean J says its 'holistic'. Makes her job look important.
But in reality they have too many applications to sort through.
At TJ ( I am looking at Naviance as I type this) not a SINGLE applicant was declined if they had GPA over 4.47
and
not a SINGLE application got accepted if the GPA was below 4.32
Clearly they are based of GPA. The Naviance chart looks like those weather forecasts...with a clear 'front' of accepts, behind which are declines..
This is exactly the same at our school (DMV private). A weather forecast is the perfect description. If you switch the scattergram to the list version, the acceptances are in order of weighted GPA. It is completely based on GPA and test score.
Anonymous wrote:Of course Dean J says its 'holistic'. Makes her job look important.
But in reality they have too many applications to sort through.
At TJ ( I am looking at Naviance as I type this) not a SINGLE applicant was declined if they had GPA over 4.47
and
not a SINGLE application got accepted if the GPA was below 4.32
Clearly they are based of GPA. The Naviance chart looks like those weather forecasts...with a clear 'front' of accepts, behind which are declines..
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Of course Dean J says its 'holistic'. Makes her job look important.
But in reality they have too many applications to sort through.
At TJ ( I am looking at Naviance as I type this) not a SINGLE applicant was declined if they had GPA over 4.47
and
not a SINGLE application got accepted if the GPA was below 4.32
Clearly they are based of GPA. The Naviance chart looks like those weather forecasts...with a clear 'front' of accepts, behind which are declines..
This is exactly the same at our school (DMV private). A weather forecast is the perfect description. If you switch the scattergram to the list version, the acceptances are in order of weighted GPA. It is completely based on GPA and test score.
Anonymous wrote:Of course Dean J says its 'holistic'. Makes her job look important.
But in reality they have too many applications to sort through.
At TJ ( I am looking at Naviance as I type this) not a SINGLE applicant was declined if they had GPA over 4.47
and
not a SINGLE application got accepted if the GPA was below 4.32
Clearly they are based of GPA. The Naviance chart looks like those weather forecasts...with a clear 'front' of accepts, behind which are declines..
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is there ever an instance where a 3.5 kid can get in coming from Sidwell or NCS (no APs)?
Unlikely but ask your counselor. On a weighted scale, you probably need a 4.6 and maximum rigor, 35 ACT, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dean J keeps stressing that UVA does a holistic review.
But in reality all they look at is course selection ( did u take the hardest courses) and what grades did u get.
So is the “holistic” part just an act to be like a more “elite” school?
They are serious about rigor. Engineering applicant from NOVA with 4.5 and 1560 was waitlisted. Maxed out on math, history and science APs but did not bother to take Lang or lit. I warned him! Thats okay. 3rd year at UMD with a Google internship summer of 26.
This is where I get really annoyed with UVA admissions. I say that as an alum and as a parent of a kid who just applied. Your kid sounds great and it's UVA's loss. My kid also maxxed out on AP classes in most subjects, BUT he stopped taking a foreign language to do it. The classes he wanted to take wouldn't all fit if he took it so he made a choice. We supported him following his interests. We'll see what UVA does.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At our oos private, UVA are more stats driven than holistic.
Same here, There is a GPA line each year (and for what it's worth it's really high--Ivy level).
Pp, definitely lower than Ivy level at our private, more like A- and up, which is maybe top third class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dean J keeps stressing that UVA does a holistic review.
But in reality all they look at is course selection ( did u take the hardest courses) and what grades did u get.
So is the “holistic” part just an act to be like a more “elite” school?
They are serious about rigor. Engineering applicant from NOVA with 4.5 and 1560 was waitlisted. Maxed out on math, history and science APs but did not bother to take Lang or lit. I warned him! Thats okay. 3rd year at UMD with a Google internship summer of 26.
Anonymous wrote:Is there ever an instance where a 3.5 kid can get in coming from Sidwell or NCS (no APs)?