Anonymous wrote:A lot of people on here can’t grasp that ED is only available to rich kids and is a massive advantage over doing RD.
Anonymous wrote:I know a lot of kids of the UC who attended unremarkable schools I hadn’t heard of. The idea that they’re all buying prestige admissions is wrong and actually reflects your UMC view of the world.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Probably outdated here on some of these but here’s some wild guesses:
UMiami
Tulane
GWU
Syracuse
Hobart and William Smith
Connecticut College
U of Vermont
Trinity College
Penn State
Hampden-Sydney
Mount Holyoke
Tulane had an admit rate for the '25 class of 9.73%. They dropped their honors college because the caliber of student is growing by leaps and bounds.
Tulane's SATs look really stellar, but they became SAT optional a few years ago--any word on how many student actually submit SATs there?
This list is dead on for “schools rich families won’t be embarrassed to send their kids. Add all SEC schools, Sewanee, UC Boulder TCU and SMU - lots of different levels of students at these schools with a rich undercurrent.
Hmm...probably depends on the family and area of the country? And political/religious leanings? I can't see most parents of a bottom-of-the-class Sidwell or GDS kid being all too enthused about Alabama or Mississippi State or Ole Miss or Arkansas or LSU. I feel like those kids are more likely to go to like...Denison.
Denison has a 29% acceptance rate. Bottom of the class (even at Sidwell or GDS) isn't guaranteed to get in there anymore.
What you’re missing is that’s the average between RD and ED. For ED it’s much higher. Add in test optional + attending boarding schools that don’t do class rank (my public high school would put on your transcript whether you were ranked #1 or #500) and it’s not hard to understand.
PP you're responding to, and I'm not missing anything. I went to a boarding school that "didn't rank", which means that they did rank, they just didn't tell us our exact rank, nor did they tell colleges. But they would give a range, or a chart of GPA vs. rank percentiles. I know I was in the top half, but not the top quarter of the class, and I guarantee that colleges knew that as well. And test optional means that grades matter *more*, not less, so it's not really helpful for a kid with mediocre grades.
Also, I know no one who is going to a school like Sidwell or GDS who is using their one shot at ED on... Denison.
Anonymous wrote:A lot of people on here can’t grasp that ED is only available to rich kids and is a massive advantage over doing RD.
Anonymous wrote:The answer to the question is they end up going to a CTCL college.
*ducks*
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Probably outdated here on some of these but here’s some wild guesses:
UMiami
Tulane
GWU
Syracuse
Hobart and William Smith
Connecticut College
U of Vermont
Trinity College
Penn State
Hampden-Sydney
Mount Holyoke
Tulane had an admit rate for the '25 class of 9.73%. They dropped their honors college because the caliber of student is growing by leaps and bounds.
Tulane's SATs look really stellar, but they became SAT optional a few years ago--any word on how many student actually submit SATs there?
This list is dead on for “schools rich families won’t be embarrassed to send their kids. Add all SEC schools, Sewanee, UC Boulder TCU and SMU - lots of different levels of students at these schools with a rich undercurrent.
Hmm...probably depends on the family and area of the country? And political/religious leanings? I can't see most parents of a bottom-of-the-class Sidwell or GDS kid being all too enthused about Alabama or Mississippi State or Ole Miss or Arkansas or LSU. I feel like those kids are more likely to go to like...Denison.
Denison has a 29% acceptance rate. Bottom of the class (even at Sidwell or GDS) isn't guaranteed to get in there anymore.
What you’re missing is that’s the average between RD and ED. For ED it’s much higher. Add in test optional + attending boarding schools that don’t do class rank (my public high school would put on your transcript whether you were ranked #1 or #500) and it’s not hard to understand.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I’m saying what if a UC kid gets a 1100 SAT and is a C student. What do they do in 2021?
If you are really that well-off then your kids probably aren't ever going to get C's. The concept of the "gentleman's C" grade is in the distant past. All a wealthy parent has to do is get tutors to have the tutor do the work for their child, help their child, or pressure the private school into giving B's . Or they are having their child assessed and getting accommodations if they start getting C's. So maybe the wealthy parent can't increase the SAT score if their child really is average, but they can absolutely influence grades.
Anonymous wrote:Denison was the place for the wealthy non-students at my DC high school. I think Sewanee has the same vibe for the south.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Probably outdated here on some of these but here’s some wild guesses:
UMiami
Tulane
GWU
Syracuse
Hobart and William Smith
Connecticut College
U of Vermont
Trinity College
Penn State
Hampden-Sydney
Mount Holyoke
Tulane had an admit rate for the '25 class of 9.73%. They dropped their honors college because the caliber of student is growing by leaps and bounds.
Tulane's SATs look really stellar, but they became SAT optional a few years ago--any word on how many student actually submit SATs there?
This list is dead on for “schools rich families won’t be embarrassed to send their kids. Add all SEC schools, Sewanee, UC Boulder TCU and SMU - lots of different levels of students at these schools with a rich undercurrent.
Hmm...probably depends on the family and area of the country? And political/religious leanings? I can't see most parents of a bottom-of-the-class Sidwell or GDS kid being all too enthused about Alabama or Mississippi State or Ole Miss or Arkansas or LSU. I feel like those kids are more likely to go to like...Denison.
Denison has a 29% acceptance rate. Bottom of the class (even at Sidwell or GDS) isn't guaranteed to get in there anymore.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Probably outdated here on some of these but here’s some wild guesses:
UMiami
Tulane
GWU
Syracuse
Hobart and William Smith
Connecticut College
U of Vermont
Trinity College
Penn State
Hampden-Sydney
Mount Holyoke
Tulane had an admit rate for the '25 class of 9.73%. They dropped their honors college because the caliber of student is growing by leaps and bounds.
Tulane's SATs look really stellar, but they became SAT optional a few years ago--any word on how many student actually submit SATs there?
This list is dead on for “schools rich families won’t be embarrassed to send their kids. Add all SEC schools, Sewanee, UC Boulder TCU and SMU - lots of different levels of students at these schools with a rich undercurrent.
Hmm...probably depends on the family and area of the country? And political/religious leanings? I can't see most parents of a bottom-of-the-class Sidwell or GDS kid being all too enthused about Alabama or Mississippi State or Ole Miss or Arkansas or LSU. I feel like those kids are more likely to go to like...Denison.