Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The obvious: BC, Villanova, Santa Clara, safety Holy Cross. But you must have considered all these?
Holy Cross a safety? Hardly.
+1 Villanova is the safety on that list.
My 4.4/1520/500+ hours of community service kid (plus a million other ECs and such) got rejected from Villanova today. I wouldn't call it a safety.
Anonymous wrote:Try St. Michael’s College—the Catholic component of the U of Toronto.
Anonymous wrote:We toured Georgetown last Spring. Did the big group conference in the hall and then broke into groups for the campus tour.
My DS was literally 1 of 6 cis white males out of the entire group of about 100 prospects. The vast majority of the others were Asian and Indian males. Girls were barely represented.
He didn't even apply. He is high stats, his mom is an undegrad and grad school alum, and his grandfather taught there for two decades.
It isn't what it used to be.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your child should have applied to at least one safety school that they love. You need to fire whoever has been advising you/her.
How do you know that the student has not applied to other schools ? This was just the EA round.
OP said this:
“My kid is non-Catholic business major.
ND and GU were two top choices.
The next options were Vanderbilt, WashU, Emory, USC, CMU, NYU”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid is non-Catholic business major.
ND and GU were two top choices.
The next options were Vanderbilt, WashU, Emory, USC, CMU, NYU
No offense, but having gone through this last year with a child with similar stats (although higher SAT), I would suggest applying to a few low reach, target, and safety schools that they would be happy to attend. My child came from a Jesuit school and was rejected by ND (although he applied RD) and waitlisted by Georgetown (also in RD). Rejected by Vanderbilt and USC. Got accepted to Boston College in RD and is very happy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid is crushed. Trying to regroup. Ideas. Thoughts.
Villanova
Bc
Loyola Marymount
U San Diego
Santa Clara university
Done - they’ll get into one of them if they were median students for nd and gtown
Anonymous wrote:We toured Georgetown last Spring. Did the big group conference in the hall and then broke into groups for the campus tour.
My DS was literally 1 of 6 cis white males out of the entire group of about 100 prospects. The vast majority of the others were Asian and Indian males. Girls were barely represented.
He didn't even apply. He is high stats, his mom is an undegrad and grad school alum, and his grandfather taught there for two decades.
It isn't what it used to be.
Anonymous wrote:St. John's University in Queens. Basically the same thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The obvious: BC, Villanova, Santa Clara, safety Holy Cross. But you must have considered all these?
Holy Cross a safety? Hardly.
+1 Villanova is the safety on that list.
My 4.4/1520/500+ hours of community service kid (plus a million other ECs and such) got rejected from Villanova today. I wouldn't call it a safety.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your child should have applied to at least one safety school that they love. You need to fire whoever has been advising you/her.
How do you know that the student has not applied to other schools ? This was just the EA round.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid is crushed. Trying to regroup. Ideas. Thoughts.
There is still a chance. At the end of the day, it doesn't matter where you go as long as it's one of T20 schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid is crushed. Trying to regroup. Ideas. Thoughts.
There is still a chance. At the end of the day, it doesn't matter where you go as long as it's one of T20 schools.
Anonymous wrote:Your child should have applied to at least one safety school that they love. You need to fire whoever has been advising you/her.
Anonymous wrote:My kid is non-Catholic business major.
ND and GU were two top choices.
The next options were Vanderbilt, WashU, Emory, USC, CMU, NYU