Anonymous wrote:My kid had a 35 ACT and an 800 math level 2 from a big 3 and got in nowhere competitive. Hit the books and pick a sport or activity and stick with it. Grades are so much more important than test scores.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Focusing on passions sounds good but as you entered 9th grade, did you really know what your passions were?
I had never played an organized sport of any kind when I started practice before the 9th grade. That was more than 35 years ago and rarely a week goes by when I'm not out practicing soccer that I picked up on August 15th, 1979. It wasn't such a big sport in the rural area I grew up in. I never won anything personally but I was the 13th man on the state runner up team as a senior. Memories I will never forget. I also know the pressure I faced trying to make varsity and in state JV tournaments helped me learn to focus and deal with my nerves during tests, both in the classroom and for the SATs.
My suggestion is to go out for a sport as a freshman and see where it takes your DC. Admissions is not going to hold trying a sport against a student.
"I'm the science kid's mom. Thanks for the guidance. It is helpful. I'd rather have her focus on her passions so that makes me happy."
This isn't really reality anymore. By 14, other kids have been playing for 7-8 years. You can't pick up sports in high school (at least not at the level that would matter in any respect for college admissions).
Depends on the sport.
What sports can you start at age 14 that would you excel at enough to impress colleges?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Focusing on passions sounds good but as you entered 9th grade, did you really know what your passions were?
I had never played an organized sport of any kind when I started practice before the 9th grade. That was more than 35 years ago and rarely a week goes by when I'm not out practicing soccer that I picked up on August 15th, 1979. It wasn't such a big sport in the rural area I grew up in. I never won anything personally but I was the 13th man on the state runner up team as a senior. Memories I will never forget. I also know the pressure I faced trying to make varsity and in state JV tournaments helped me learn to focus and deal with my nerves during tests, both in the classroom and for the SATs.
My suggestion is to go out for a sport as a freshman and see where it takes your DC. Admissions is not going to hold trying a sport against a student.
"I'm the science kid's mom. Thanks for the guidance. It is helpful. I'd rather have her focus on her passions so that makes me happy."
This isn't really reality anymore. By 14, other kids have been playing for 7-8 years. You can't pick up sports in high school (at least not at the level that would matter in any respect for college admissions).
Depends on the sport.
Definitely not soccer!
What sports can you start at age 14 that would you excel at enough to impress colleges?
Anonymous wrote:Definitely not fencing anymore nor the other sports mentioned except maybe crew since there aren't too many crew programs that allow middle schoolers. My DS who is 10 fences and there is no way a kid starting at age 14 would attract attention from a college recruiter. Maybe if they started 7 days a week but still probably not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Focusing on passions sounds good but as you entered 9th grade, did you really know what your passions were?
I had never played an organized sport of any kind when I started practice before the 9th grade. That was more than 35 years ago and rarely a week goes by when I'm not out practicing soccer that I picked up on August 15th, 1979. It wasn't such a big sport in the rural area I grew up in. I never won anything personally but I was the 13th man on the state runner up team as a senior. Memories I will never forget. I also know the pressure I faced trying to make varsity and in state JV tournaments helped me learn to focus and deal with my nerves during tests, both in the classroom and for the SATs.
My suggestion is to go out for a sport as a freshman and see where it takes your DC. Admissions is not going to hold trying a sport against a student.
"I'm the science kid's mom. Thanks for the guidance. It is helpful. I'd rather have her focus on her passions so that makes me happy."
This isn't really reality anymore. By 14, other kids have been playing for 7-8 years. You can't pick up sports in high school (at least not at the level that would matter in any respect for college admissions).
Depends on the sport.
What sports can you start at age 14 that would you excel at enough to impress colleges?
Anonymous wrote:
What sports can you start at age 14 that would you excel at enough to impress colleges?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Focusing on passions sounds good but as you entered 9th grade, did you really know what your passions were?
I had never played an organized sport of any kind when I started practice before the 9th grade. That was more than 35 years ago and rarely a week goes by when I'm not out practicing soccer that I picked up on August 15th, 1979. It wasn't such a big sport in the rural area I grew up in. I never won anything personally but I was the 13th man on the state runner up team as a senior. Memories I will never forget. I also know the pressure I faced trying to make varsity and in state JV tournaments helped me learn to focus and deal with my nerves during tests, both in the classroom and for the SATs.
My suggestion is to go out for a sport as a freshman and see where it takes your DC. Admissions is not going to hold trying a sport against a student.
"I'm the science kid's mom. Thanks for the guidance. It is helpful. I'd rather have her focus on her passions so that makes me happy."
This isn't really reality anymore. By 14, other kids have been playing for 7-8 years. You can't pick up sports in high school (at least not at the level that would matter in any respect for college admissions).
Depends on the sport.
What sports can you start at age 14 that would you excel at enough to impress colleges?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Focusing on passions sounds good but as you entered 9th grade, did you really know what your passions were?
I had never played an organized sport of any kind when I started practice before the 9th grade. That was more than 35 years ago and rarely a week goes by when I'm not out practicing soccer that I picked up on August 15th, 1979. It wasn't such a big sport in the rural area I grew up in. I never won anything personally but I was the 13th man on the state runner up team as a senior. Memories I will never forget. I also know the pressure I faced trying to make varsity and in state JV tournaments helped me learn to focus and deal with my nerves during tests, both in the classroom and for the SATs.
My suggestion is to go out for a sport as a freshman and see where it takes your DC. Admissions is not going to hold trying a sport against a student.
"I'm the science kid's mom. Thanks for the guidance. It is helpful. I'd rather have her focus on her passions so that makes me happy."
This isn't really reality anymore. By 14, other kids have been playing for 7-8 years. You can't pick up sports in high school (at least not at the level that would matter in any respect for college admissions).
Depends on the sport.