Anonymous wrote:To the OP: please note that so many of these responses are clearly from people who do not have legacy status to offer to their kids.
The vast majority of legacies would be there anyway, or worst case it is a tie-breaker. There are a few well-publicized cases of kids who get a big boost from it. These tend to be filthy rich kids so it is very obvious.
If these kids are too dumb to understand it, let them live in their sad little world. Tell your child to hold their head high and know that they fully deserve to be there and not to care what these small people think.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, he's very lucky because that's what it is. Luck.
No, the point is he had a hook. That isn’t luck.
Anonymous wrote:My son got into a top school EA. It was the school where dh and I attended. He is a top student in all respects, hard worker, great stats/rigor, leadership, community service, etc. And none of this was pushed/curated by us, he really drove it all (including applications), and we are really proud of him.
A couple of kids from school who got rejected said “oh but your parents went there” like that’s the only reason he got in. I know it helps that we did, of course, but his stats match the student population, it’s not like he was pulled up despite bad grades/scores. We aren’t big benefactors either, it’s not like the school would see big donations in our history.
So how to respond if someone says that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, he's very lucky because that's what it is. Luck.
No, the point is he had a hook. That isn’t luck.
A person is lucky if they happen to be born to people who went to an elite college that gives a legacy preference. That's definitely luck.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just say “yes, I’m really lucky.”
Especially if you’re talking to a kid, and that kid hasn’t yet matched with their college. They’re in a stressful situation and it’s on you, the kid who’s lucky enough to be into your first choice college in December, to be the bigger person.
100% agree with this. Just try to be kind even if the other kid wasn’t at his best.
Op here, thank you, this is how I’ve steered him so far.
We know he’s hooked and of course that helped, but I don’t want to that to minimize the hard work he’s put in over the years and imply that he doesn’t deserve to be there at all. He doesn’t deserve it more than others, I don’t believe that, but he is a good kid and was a strong candidate.
Okay, you've admitted he's a strong student but not necessarily stronger than his high achieving classmates, right? Some resentment in that case is natural. Get over it, and take the win.
I never said that. Strong SAT score, has a perfect GPA with highest rigor classes. He goes to a public HS, not private. He’s well known a a top student though they don’t give out class ranks.
We have never hired a tutor or a college counselor. Plenty of applicants have had advantages that he didn’t have.
If he brings it up again I will suggest he say “thanks I’m lucky” and change the subject like pp’s have said.
You didn't need to hire college counselor because you were legacy and your kid was a shoo-in. Are you really this obtuse?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son got into a top school EA. It was the school where dh and I attended. He is a top student in all respects, hard worker, great stats/rigor, leadership, community service, etc. And none of this was pushed/curated by us, he really drove it all (including applications), and we are really proud of him.
A couple of kids from school who got rejected said “oh but your parents went there” like that’s the only reason he got in. I know it helps that we did, of course, but his stats match the student population, it’s not like he was pulled up despite bad grades/scores. We aren’t big benefactors either, it’s not like the school would see big donations in our history.
So how to respond if someone says that?
Many top schools no longer give bumps for legacy students. Are you sure that they still do?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“Yes, legacy probably helped me, but many legacies don’t get admitted. My application was competitive in every way. No shame here. Good luck to you!”
Please don’t say this.
Anonymous wrote:"Yes. We're really happy that he was accepted and hope he likes it as much as we did."