Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought USC has always been and always will be Southern Cal. Is this no longer the case?
Mostly it is.
Well, what should University of South Carolina be called then?![]()
U of SC not USC
When I was getting a grad degree at the University of South Carolina, the school sweatshirts people wore were either "USC" or "Carolina". Both terms mean something else to out of state folks, but "Carolina" is clear to the target demographic. Nobody in Columbia particularly gives a crap what people from out of state call the school in southern California or the one in Chapel Hill, and it doesn't occur to them to ever give it a thought.
Nobody ever said "U of SC" and I've never seen that printed anywhere.
Google using those words and you will see.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought USC has always been and always will be Southern Cal. Is this no longer the case?
Mostly it is.
Well, what should University of South Carolina be called then?![]()
U of SC not USC
When I was getting a grad degree at the University of South Carolina, the school sweatshirts people wore were either "USC" or "Carolina". Both terms mean something else to out of state folks, but "Carolina" is clear to the target demographic. Nobody in Columbia particularly gives a crap what people from out of state call the school in southern California or the one in Chapel Hill, and it doesn't occur to them to ever give it a thought.
Nobody ever said "U of SC" and I've never seen that printed anywhere.
Anonymous wrote:^^Wouldn’t the top choice school find out about this and withdraw its acceptance - potentially leaving the student with no acceptances? Honor code is important to schools, particularly the top ones that get scrutinized for fairness, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought USC has always been and always will be Southern Cal. Is this no longer the case?
Mostly it is.
Well, what should University of South Carolina be called then?![]()
U of SC not USC
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^Wouldn’t the top choice school find out about this and withdraw its acceptance - potentially leaving the student with no acceptances? Honor code is important to schools, particularly the top ones that get scrutinized for fairness, etc.
yep this is a real possibility.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here's a new statistic that might be useful. Of the 48,000 UVA applications sent in this year (ED, EA and RD), 43% did not submit scores. However we don't know how that decision
impacted getting in or not. https://uvamagazine.org/articles/undergraduate_application_rates_hit_records?utm_source=initial&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=february-enews-21
Right. That’s the info I want to know. Of those *accepted,* how many sent in scores (or rather, did NOT send in scores). Until they make that public, I feel very skeptical about “test-optional.”
Anonymous wrote:I don't think Tech EA has even come out yet so yes this poster truly did have their kid apply ED with every intention of breaking that contact. Unbelievable that you'd consider that and even more so that you'd go around bragging about it lol
Anonymous wrote:^^Wouldn’t the top choice school find out about this and withdraw its acceptance - potentially leaving the student with no acceptances? Honor code is important to schools, particularly the top ones that get scrutinized for fairness, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD had 1190 (poor test taker) and didn't submit scores, 3.9 GPA, balanced extra-curriculars, summer internship in a research institution for the past two years, employed since 16yo, and highly selective competitive summer (with stipend) camps since middle school. We're in NOVA. Applied based on interest/major, location/campus, and affordability (key factor to graduate debt free).
In:
VA Tech-ED
UW-Madison
UC-Boulder
WVU
CSU with generous merit
Denied:
Ohio State
Still waiting on her top choice and it's not UVA (she didn't like the vibe there...sorry DCUM). We did hire a college counselor to assist her with applications, because she does not want to listen to her parents.
She had to go to VT if she ED
You're correct. It's VA Tech unless her top choice comes through.....her decision...tough choice.
no its not her decision, she made the decision when she applied and was accepted ED to Virginia Tech... that's where she's going regardless.
PP here. Her top choice is a private highly selective school. If she decides to go to her top choice, we will lose a deposit at Tech...that's all.
Very unethical. If your DD applied ED to a school, and if the school accepted her, she must go there. That is how it works.
To all the pitchforks out there. You do realize most colleges are struggling financially at the moment. Revenue generating activities are non-existent (no tickets sales from college games) and you really can't charge room and board if your students are learning remotely. All of a sudden, your average/below average full-pay out-of-state student is a very attractive option. I do not think colleges care about where your kid was accepted ED, they want your money.
Well you have certainly deluded yourself into thinking that... but I'd suggest a call to your high school counselor at the very least to make sure you understand what is at stake for your kid (not you, your kid)
I think it is a troll. No one is so arrogant that they would risk their kid’s college acceptance by refusing to pull apps after an ED acceptance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD had 1190 (poor test taker) and didn't submit scores, 3.9 GPA, balanced extra-curriculars, summer internship in a research institution for the past two years, employed since 16yo, and highly selective competitive summer (with stipend) camps since middle school. We're in NOVA. Applied based on interest/major, location/campus, and affordability (key factor to graduate debt free).
In:
VA Tech-ED
UW-Madison
UC-Boulder
WVU
CSU with generous merit
Denied:
Ohio State
Still waiting on her top choice and it's not UVA (she didn't like the vibe there...sorry DCUM). We did hire a college counselor to assist her with applications, because she does not want to listen to her parents.
She had to go to VT if she ED
You're correct. It's VA Tech unless her top choice comes through.....her decision...tough choice.
no its not her decision, she made the decision when she applied and was accepted ED to Virginia Tech... that's where she's going regardless.
PP here. Her top choice is a private highly selective school. If she decides to go to her top choice, we will lose a deposit at Tech...that's all.
Very unethical. If your DD applied ED to a school, and if the school accepted her, she must go there. That is how it works.
To all the pitchforks out there. You do realize most colleges are struggling financially at the moment. Revenue generating activities are non-existent (no tickets sales from college games) and you really can't charge room and board if your students are learning remotely. All of a sudden, your average/below average full-pay out-of-state student is a very attractive option. I do not think colleges care about where your kid was accepted ED, they want your money.
Well you have certainly deluded yourself into thinking that... but I'd suggest a call to your high school counselor at the very least to make sure you understand what is at stake for your kid (not you, your kid)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD had 1190 (poor test taker) and didn't submit scores, 3.9 GPA, balanced extra-curriculars, summer internship in a research institution for the past two years, employed since 16yo, and highly selective competitive summer (with stipend) camps since middle school. We're in NOVA. Applied based on interest/major, location/campus, and affordability (key factor to graduate debt free).
In:
VA Tech-ED
UW-Madison
UC-Boulder
WVU
CSU with generous merit
Denied:
Ohio State
Still waiting on her top choice and it's not UVA (she didn't like the vibe there...sorry DCUM). We did hire a college counselor to assist her with applications, because she does not want to listen to her parents.
She had to go to VT if she ED
You're correct. It's VA Tech unless her top choice comes through.....her decision...tough choice.
no its not her decision, she made the decision when she applied and was accepted ED to Virginia Tech... that's where she's going regardless.
PP here. Her top choice is a private highly selective school. If she decides to go to her top choice, we will lose a deposit at Tech...that's all.
Very unethical. If your DD applied ED to a school, and if the school accepted her, she must go there. That is how it works.
To all the pitchforks out there. You do realize most colleges are struggling financially at the moment. Revenue generating activities are non-existent (no tickets sales from college games) and you really can't charge room and board if your students are learning remotely. All of a sudden, your average/below average full-pay out-of-state student is a very attractive option. I do not think colleges care about where your kid was accepted ED, they want your money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Um no not overthinking. Are you sure your daughter was accepted ED and not EA? If she was accepted ED, she has an obligation to go there absent highly unusual circumstances. I can't imagine a high school where the counselor would support ignoring an ED obligation - it will look very bad for the high school, and as a PP said, it could result in all of her other applications denying/withdrawing acceptances.
PP-Yes. I am sure.
Parent of student accepted ED, you, and your student, and high school counselor, all signed an agreement that all other apps would be withdrawn upon ED acceptance. Are you aware of this?
PP here....no it was not communicated to us. We have withdrawn all of the applications already except for her top choice.
You signed an electronic agreement, as did your student and high school counselor, that communicated it.
PP here--are you guys upset that my low stat kid got into good schools? Sure sounds like it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Admitted to Brown.
What were the stats?
4.53 W GPA and 4.0 UW. 12 AP classes all 5s and 4s, including AP Spanish (so six years of foreign language).
Good ECs and leadership roles. Won a county-wide scholarship contest to study abroad. Strong essay and good refs
Nothing out of the ordinary in other words.
She got 1460 on SAT but decided not to include.
Great stats. The only Brown admittees I know were URM.
AP scores are a type of test score. They lend some credibility to the AP grades.
Why not? 1460 is great.