Anonymous wrote:OP, you have a beautifully simple option sitting right in front of you.
If your son really likes William & Mary, I'd encourage him to just apply there ED and be done with it. Only a small handful of the reachy private schools people have listed would possibly give him a "better" experience than W&M, admissions to all of them would be iffy, and absolutely none of those would be cheaper than the in-state rate at W&M. Set the money you save aside in undergrad to help with law school (or other grad school).
(Also have him check out W&M's adventure program: https://www.wm.edu/offices/wellness/campusrec/programs/outdoorrec/trips/ )
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are we supposed to know what "strong standard" means? Is that a B student? A C+ student?
Agreed this is all just a bit too vague. Disliking the college transitions booster.
There is no College Transitions booster. And what's your contribution here?
There’s an ai booster. It’s pretty obvious and hopefully Jeff starts getting rid of them
What's an ai booster?
An ai made to boost schools, websites, etc. A lot of the internet is bots, not real people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are we supposed to know what "strong standard" means? Is that a B student? A C+ student?
Agreed this is all just a bit too vague. Disliking the college transitions booster.
There is no College Transitions booster. And what's your contribution here?
There’s an ai booster. It’s pretty obvious and hopefully Jeff starts getting rid of them
What's an ai booster?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, you have a beautifully simple option sitting right in front of you.
If your son really likes William & Mary, I'd encourage him to just apply there ED and be done with it. Only a small handful of the reachy private schools people have listed would possibly give him a "better" experience than W&M, admissions to all of them would be iffy, and absolutely none of those would be cheaper than the in-state rate at W&M. Set the money you save aside in undergrad to help with law school (or other grad school).
(Also have him check out W&M's adventure program: https://www.wm.edu/offices/wellness/campusrec/programs/outdoorrec/trips/ )
OP here, we are OOS but if DS wanted to do this I would fully supportive. I agree there are great benefits to finishing the college process early and especially to minimizing the stress.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are we supposed to know what "strong standard" means? Is that a B student? A C+ student?
Agreed this is all just a bit too vague. Disliking the college transitions booster.
There is no College Transitions booster. And what's your contribution here?
There’s an ai booster. It’s pretty obvious and hopefully Jeff starts getting rid of them
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Its a phrase used by some expensive private counselors and on an obscure podcast.
Normal people have no idea what OP is referring to with that phrase.
Admissions officers at colleges use the phrase “standard strong” when going to committee and evaluating applicants. They created it not DCUM.
Anonymous wrote:OP, you have a beautifully simple option sitting right in front of you.
If your son really likes William & Mary, I'd encourage him to just apply there ED and be done with it. Only a small handful of the reachy private schools people have listed would possibly give him a "better" experience than W&M, admissions to all of them would be iffy, and absolutely none of those would be cheaper than the in-state rate at W&M. Set the money you save aside in undergrad to help with law school (or other grad school).
(Also have him check out W&M's adventure program: https://www.wm.edu/offices/wellness/campusrec/programs/outdoorrec/trips/ )
Anonymous wrote:Here's a suggested school list:
Male
(Full pay?)
GPA is 3.9UW/4.5W;
SAT 1510;
The highest rigor at a private school.
Major interests: economics & cog science
Reach (choose 1 for ED and 1 for ED2 in the event of ED1 rejection):
Northwestern
UChicago
CMU
WashU
Target:
Case
Lehigh
Denison
UMiami
Tulane
Wake
Northweastern
BU
BC
Villanova
Likely:
Pitt (rolling - apply in August)
Syracuse
Vermont
CU-Boulder
Dickinson
Elon
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have never seen or heard anyone use that particular, odd phrase before. You travel in very strange circles.
"Strong standard" doesn't make any sense if you are talking about a kid with high SATs and grades. That's not what the word "Standard" means....
It's standard strong. IECs and AOs use it ALL the time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are we supposed to know what "strong standard" means? Is that a B student? A C+ student?
Agreed this is all just a bit too vague. Disliking the college transitions booster.
There is no College Transitions booster. And what's your contribution here?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Since there appears to be a high school student on the thread, I'll address the OP directly. Although my comment on the CogSci programs of URochester and Case Western was based largely on knowledge of these schools, this site may be of interest:
https://www.collegetransitions.com/blog/best-colleges-for-cognitive-science/
For the undergraduate study of cognitive science, it ranks URochester 12th nationally and Case Western Reserve 26th.
College transitions Methodology is not about academic quality. It’s a ranking of graduation rates and salary, which is mostly locale and choices, not having much at all to do with the college itself. I wish people stopped posting this poor source as fact.
It’s as valid as the link someone posted ranking graduate schools by publications as a valid ranking for undergraduate studies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If he is at a private school, you need to lean on their guidance. What are they suggesting for an ED? Have you seen the scattergrams?
What subject is the outside research project in?
Northwestern likes kids with multiple interdisciplinary spikes. Make sure he shows a lot of demonstrated interest. There are a lot of ideas here for him for this summer.
- continue the pt job (can you tie into behavioral economics)
- add in an in school independent study into his transcript if his high school allows it for senior year and make the topic related to behavioral economics
- review his full activities list to ensure he’s had impact and leadership as well as showing a community orientation and long-term commitment
I second this. Consider adding something like this into this summer to accentuate his econ spike:
https://fte.org/students/student-programs/
https://www.coursera.org/learn/duke-behavioral-finance (free)
Agree. I wouldn’t list Econ unless kid actually has some relevant knowledge/tie-in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are we supposed to know what "strong standard" means? Is that a B student? A C+ student?
Agreed this is all just a bit too vague. Disliking the college transitions booster.