Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Best not to participate.
I have interviewed for my HPY for about 28 years. The local admissions
Rep responsible for the area knows most of the long term Alumni
Interviewers. Admissions often calls with follow up questions and kids regularly get admitted.
I am not a recent grad but I am the parent of a recent grad so I am relatively up to date. I don’t think skipping an interview or opting out is an option. Those kids are automatic rejects, at least at my HPY. If the alumni interview seems off base admissions will follow up or offer another interview.
What qualifications do you possess to identify, evaluate and assess a 17/18 year old in approximately 30 min? Do you have a Psych degree or background in behavior assessment. Perhaps admissions strategies for assessing talent, ambition or potential.
Im going to be you have none of these and therefore are entirely unqualified to determine the fate of someone who spent years with teachers and a school that already provides a full picture.
This is an outdated practice and should go away. You arent qualified to assess these candidates.
Sorry your kid got dinged and you blame the interviewer for that.
DC is at one of the following: HYPMS. Good try. Its just a silly outdated practice. Alumni arent qualified to assess a high school senior. Tell me otherwise and what gives them this ability?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Best not to participate.
I have interviewed for my HPY for about 28 years. The local admissions
Rep responsible for the area knows most of the long term Alumni
Interviewers. Admissions often calls with follow up questions and kids regularly get admitted.
I am not a recent grad but I am the parent of a recent grad so I am relatively up to date. I don’t think skipping an interview or opting out is an option. Those kids are automatic rejects, at least at my HPY. If the alumni interview seems off base admissions will follow up or offer another interview.
What qualifications do you possess to identify, evaluate and assess a 17/18 year old in approximately 30 min? Do you have a Psych degree or background in behavior assessment. Perhaps admissions strategies for assessing talent, ambition or potential.
Im going to be you have none of these and therefore are entirely unqualified to determine the fate of someone who spent years with teachers and a school that already provides a full picture.
This is an outdated practice and should go away. You arent qualified to assess these candidates.
Sorry your kid got dinged and you blame the interviewer for that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Best not to participate.
I have interviewed for my HPY for about 28 years. The local admissions
Rep responsible for the area knows most of the long term Alumni
Interviewers. Admissions often calls with follow up questions and kids regularly get admitted.
I am not a recent grad but I am the parent of a recent grad so I am relatively up to date. I don’t think skipping an interview or opting out is an option. Those kids are automatic rejects, at least at my HPY. If the alumni interview seems off base admissions will follow up or offer another interview.
What qualifications do you possess to identify, evaluate and assess a 17/18 year old in approximately 30 min? Do you have a Psych degree or background in behavior assessment. Perhaps admissions strategies for assessing talent, ambition or potential.
Im going to be you have none of these and therefore are entirely unqualified to determine the fate of someone who spent years with teachers and a school that already provides a full picture.
This is an outdated practice and should go away. You arent qualified to assess these candidates.
Sorry your kid got dinged and you blame the interviewer for that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Best not to participate.
I have interviewed for my HPY for about 28 years. The local admissions
Rep responsible for the area knows most of the long term Alumni
Interviewers. Admissions often calls with follow up questions and kids regularly get admitted.
I am not a recent grad but I am the parent of a recent grad so I am relatively up to date. I don’t think skipping an interview or opting out is an option. Those kids are automatic rejects, at least at my HPY. If the alumni interview seems off base admissions will follow up or offer another interview.
What qualifications do you possess to identify, evaluate and assess a 17/18 year old in approximately 30 min? Do you have a Psych degree or background in behavior assessment. Perhaps admissions strategies for assessing talent, ambition or potential.
Im going to be you have none of these and therefore are entirely unqualified to determine the fate of someone who spent years with teachers and a school that already provides a full picture.
This is an outdated practice and should go away. You arent qualified to assess these candidates.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Best not to participate.
I have interviewed for my HPY for about 28 years. The local admissions
Rep responsible for the area knows most of the long term Alumni
Interviewers. Admissions often calls with follow up questions and kids regularly get admitted.
I am not a recent grad but I am the parent of a recent grad so I am relatively up to date. I don’t think skipping an interview or opting out is an option. Those kids are automatic rejects, at least at my HPY. If the alumni interview seems off base admissions will follow up or offer another interview.
That is crazy. If not doing an alumni interview is an automatic reject that message is not getting out there at all. That is not at all how the alumni interviews are described during campus visits.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Best not to participate.
I have interviewed for my HPY for about 28 years. The local admissions
Rep responsible for the area knows most of the long term Alumni
Interviewers. Admissions often calls with follow up questions and kids regularly get admitted.
I am not a recent grad but I am the parent of a recent grad so I am relatively up to date. I don’t think skipping an interview or opting out is an option. Those kids are automatic rejects, at least at my HPY. If the alumni interview seems off base admissions will follow up or offer another interview.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Best not to participate.
I have interviewed for my HPY for about 28 years. The local admissions
Rep responsible for the area knows most of the long term Alumni
Interviewers. Admissions often calls with follow up questions and kids regularly get admitted.
I am not a recent grad but I am the parent of a recent grad so I am relatively up to date. I don’t think skipping an interview or opting out is an option. Those kids are automatic rejects, at least at my HPY. If the alumni interview seems off base admissions will follow up or offer another interview.
Anonymous wrote:Best not to participate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've been an HYP alumni interviewer for over 20 years. Most interviews dont make a huge difference, because they just echo the rest of the application.
The school continues to have interviews, though , because the interviewer can spot a kid who can't function, is arrogant, can't keep an appointment, or has PITA parents who try to interject themselves into the process. Admissions committees don't trust high schools to flag these sorts of kids for fear of lawsuits. Every admissions officer seems to have a horror story about a disastrous student who might have gotten in but for an interviewer who raised a concern.
I rest my case. all these problem children best to avoid you like the plague.
If you live in a town with an alum ni interviewer nearby, you can't decline an interview.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've been an HYP alumni interviewer for over 20 years. Most interviews dont make a huge difference, because they just echo the rest of the application.
The school continues to have interviews, though , because the interviewer can spot a kid who can't function, is arrogant, can't keep an appointment, or has PITA parents who try to interject themselves into the process. Admissions committees don't trust high schools to flag these sorts of kids for fear of lawsuits. Every admissions officer seems to have a horror story about a disastrous student who might have gotten in but for an interviewer who raised a concern.
I rest my case. all these problem children best to avoid you like the plague.