Anonymous wrote:Denison or Kenyon? Merit aid of ~20K at both.
Anonymous wrote:Acceptances:
Hampton
Tuskegee
North Carolina A and T
Morehouse
Florida A & M University
Bowie State
Morgan State
Plans to major in computer science
Anonymous wrote:Princeton
Stanford
English, creative writing, maybe philosophy
Anonymous wrote:Acceptances:
Hampton
Tuskegee
North Carolina A and T
Morehouse
Florida A & M University
Bowie State
Morgan State
Plans to major in computer science
Anonymous wrote:Acceptances:
Hampton
Tuskegee
North Carolina A and T
Morehouse
Florida A & M University
Bowie State
Morgan State
Plans to major in computer science
Anonymous wrote:Princeton
Stanford
English, creative writing, maybe philosophy
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rankings and "brand" are important criteria. But honestly, no less important are culture and setting. We have three kids in highly selective schools. In hindsight, the #1 most important criteria we wish we had emphasized for them was -- what kind of place is most likely to make you intellectually curious, happy, and healthy? This is not always obvious when high school seniors are making their choices. The clearest example from our experience is geography. For our crew, it's CLEARLY better to spend four years in a place that you enjoy, rather than four years in a (higher-ranked, better known) place that you do not. For one of our kids, cold dark winters were just not a good thing. The second example is the student body mindset. It's CLEARLY better to spend four years in a collaborative environment, than four years in a (higher-ranked, better known) endless competitive pressure cooker. Don't underestimate how much mental health is a thing at their age. Anyway, to each their own, but that's our experience. Luckily we have a fourth kid in high school and can try to help him get it right.
Nice post. This is the real name of the game. Where will my student thrive? There is not just one place, but if you can figure out a handful or two and apply to those, you've done well in the search process.
Anonymous wrote:Rankings and "brand" are important criteria. But honestly, no less important are culture and setting. We have three kids in highly selective schools. In hindsight, the #1 most important criteria we wish we had emphasized for them was -- what kind of place is most likely to make you intellectually curious, happy, and healthy? This is not always obvious when high school seniors are making their choices. The clearest example from our experience is geography. For our crew, it's CLEARLY better to spend four years in a place that you enjoy, rather than four years in a (higher-ranked, better known) place that you do not. For one of our kids, cold dark winters were just not a good thing. The second example is the student body mindset. It's CLEARLY better to spend four years in a collaborative environment, than four years in a (higher-ranked, better known) endless competitive pressure cooker. Don't underestimate how much mental health is a thing at their age. Anyway, to each their own, but that's our experience. Luckily we have a fourth kid in high school and can try to help him get it right.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:University of Denver
Santa Clara University
Loyola Marymount (CA)
College of Charleston
Auburn
TN
Chapman
Elon
U of San Diego ( private )
Yes my DC is all over the place geographically and type of school. Will be Liberal Arts major.
Many of these schools are on my S25's list. Do you mind sharing stats and if you got any merit? Thank you!
Sure
33 ACT
3 AP 3 honors (school does not offer a lot of APs )
Private DMV school
Solid extra curricular and one unusual sport
GPA 3.6 unweighted
Full pay
Female
Anonymous wrote:Acceptances:
Hampton
Tuskegee
North Carolina A and T
Morehouse
Florida A & M University
Bowie State
Morgan State
Plans to major in computer science
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:University of Denver
Santa Clara University
Loyola Marymount (CA)
College of Charleston
Auburn
TN
Chapman
Elon
U of San Diego ( private )
Yes my DC is all over the place geographically and type of school. Will be Liberal Arts major.
Many of these schools are on my S25's list. Do you mind sharing stats and if you got any merit? Thank you!
Anonymous wrote:CMU - grant $37K, has to apply for annual renewal
URochester - scholarship $14K annually
UNC - scholarship $4.7K annually
UVA
W&M
intended major Biology or Chemistry
Prefers mid size, not into sports or greek