Anonymous wrote:4 schools, all applying ED. Two reach, one on par that our kid would be very happy with, one safety. Will re-evaluate if necessary after we see what happens. Our kid is competitive, but who knows. It's a weird time. We are in Virginia, but not in the DMV.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I suggest 20+. This year will be tought.
Ridiculous and unnecessary. Your kid is still trying to finish high school.
Be more disciplined about creating a good list (which should be tight, as described above).
Status-driven parents consider this a lottery and just try to buy more tickets, ignoring what that says to their child about the acceptability of anything over T20.
I am a quality and achievement-oriented parent. I don’t give a shit about the bumper sticker. Our family is very stealth about our goals and accomplishments.
DS is applying to as many as 17 schools, depending on ED and EA results. Seven or eight of those are lottery schools for him, 2 safeties and a bunch of high matches that the counselor says are “reaches” though DS is above their 75th %.
How does your DS handle 17 sets of unique supplemental essays?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All of these 35/36 ACT kids applying to Pitt as their safety are mucking it up for kids who actually want to go there.
You do understand that Pitt does know how to predict their yield, right?
I don't, can you elaborate?
I’ll take a stab. Every school has a formula (based on experience) for how many offers will produce a single acceptance. They evaluate this based on the stats of the kids, not just overall numbers, hence the discussion about “yield protection.” Some schools don’t offer to high stats kids who don’t show interest because they know the likelihood of acceptance is low (they know that they’re a “safety” school). So the number of offers that go out is not a fixed number. It depends on the projected yield for similarly situated students. For 2019-2020, Pitt’s overall yield was 22.15% & it was probably lower than that for high stats kids. Schools do mess up yield projection from time to time (*ahem* Virginia Tech), but they will generally know how many high stats kids will accept for every offer made. So, if for example, it’s 10%, then they know that they can make 10 offers for every one that will accept. The nine that don’t accept aren’t taking a space away from a lower stats kid. The bottom line is that the higher stats kids don’t soak up all the admissions (unless there really are that many high stats kids that will go to Pitt, in which case, fair enough).
I think Pitt overenrolled quite a bit forthe 2025s.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I suggest 20+. This year will be tought.
Ridiculous and unnecessary. Your kid is still trying to finish high school.
Be more disciplined about creating a good list (which should be tight, as described above).
Status-driven parents consider this a lottery and just try to buy more tickets, ignoring what that says to their child about the acceptability of anything over T20.
I am a quality and achievement-oriented parent. I don’t give a shit about the bumper sticker. Our family is very stealth about our goals and accomplishments.
DS is applying to as many as 17 schools, depending on ED and EA results. Seven or eight of those are lottery schools for him, 2 safeties and a bunch of high matches that the counselor says are “reaches” though DS is above their 75th %.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I suggest 20+. This year will be tought.
Ridiculous and unnecessary. Your kid is still trying to finish high school.
Be more disciplined about creating a good list (which should be tight, as described above).
Status-driven parents consider this a lottery and just try to buy more tickets, ignoring what that says to their child about the acceptability of anything over T20.
I am a quality and achievement-oriented parent. I don’t give a shit about the bumper sticker. Our family is very stealth about our goals and accomplishments.
DS is applying to as many as 17 schools, depending on ED and EA results. Seven or eight of those are lottery schools for him, 2 safeties and a bunch of high matches that the counselor says are “reaches” though DS is above their 75th %.