

DD is in the top 5% of a very rigorous charter school (unfortunately they don't rank but she's been told by a reliable source that she is #2, again another thread

Anyone have experience with these admission offices and feel like sharing?
Instead of hijacking an earlier thread, I"m interested in opinions and experiences of those with students who applied to colleges in the Northeast. Forget about the financial aspects for a moment (that is a thread of its own lol) and tell us what schools were applied to and general information about the applicant. I'm trying to get an idea of where she should be applying. I'm familiar with the reach/match/safety idea but no one is really telling us the particulars. Of course, if you are not comfortable giving up the info, this thread might not be for you lol
DD is in the top 5% of a very rigorous charter school (unfortunately they don't rank but she's been told by a reliable source that she is #2, again another thread), has a weighted 4.3 GPA, and takes the equivalent of 3 AP and 3 IB courses. She has yet to receive anything less than an A- in any class ever. Her SATS aren't great, they are around 2000 but she'll take them again and she'll take the ACT as well. So, schools she is looking at (this is a very shortened list) including Amhert, Vassar, Tufts, Wellesley, Barnard (reach schools), Mt. Holyoke, Skidmore, Smith, UMass, Bucknell (match schools we think?), Simmons, Susquehanna and I can't remember the others (safety).
Anyone have experience with these admission offices and feel like sharing?
Of the reach schools, the only one that I'd think is likely a true stretch is Amherst. Wellesley, Vassar and Barnard and Tufts are toss-ups for admission, in my opinion, with her scores and background, so if she applies to all four I'd bet she'll get one.
Is she interested in single-sex education? The applicant pools for those schools tend to be somewhat self-selecting and so they tend to have somewhat higher admit rates than comparable coed schools of their caliber. Wellesley is a fantastic school with one of the most powerful alumnae networks in the world.
Does the community matter? In that case, Wellesley, Barnard and Tufts have the upper hand if she wants easy access to a large city (Wellesley offers the perfect blend of suburban campus with urban access, in my opinion) whereas Vassar is in a kind of dumpy minor urban area and Amherst in in a very small, but very erudite, town.
One important, and often underappreciated, thing that the more selective colleges use as a barometer is the applicant's perceived passion for the school. They will track every touch your daughter makes with the school, from initial inquiry through tours through campus days through application. They don't want to waste their time accepting students who are just applying to a slate of colleges but likely won't attend. So have your daughter start engaging the admissions offices at her top choices now and have her (note, it should be her) make contact with the admissions office and start showing that passion.
Also, what does she want to study? That matters, as each of those schools has distinct strengths and areas where they are weaker, so that is something to consider.
ThanksI also believe that Amherst is a true reach, as well as Tufts. She really likes the Western Mass schools/Amherst area but is reluctant to go to all-womens school so Smith and Mt. Holyoke are becoming more "safety" than match schools.
Its good to know that they keep track of communication(s). In a quest to be admitted to her first choice (Trinity in CT) she toured, did an information session and was on a list to interview when I squelched the school for safety reasons. In hindsight I wished I had researched the school more before she fell in love with it
Once she completes the upcoming tours on her list by mid-September, she'll tighten up her list and start interviewing, etc. She has toured 14 schools, is doing six more in the next two weeks, four in upstate New York in August, and we are unsure whether to take the trip to PA to visit four schools there or apply to two of them and see what happens. That's a long way to go unless one or two hit in the top 5-8 choices.
She would like to double major in Neuroscience/Psychobiology and Hispanic Studies. At the moment (and I know this can change because I haven't decided what I want to do with my life yet at 53 lol) she wants to work for the FBI in some type of profiling/psych or enforcement position. She is also considering pre-law. Wow, I get tired just typing those aspirations.![]()
Of the reach schools, the only one that I'd think is likely a true stretch is Amherst. Wellesley, Vassar and Barnard and Tufts are toss-ups for admission, in my opinion, with her scores and background, so if she applies to all four I'd bet she'll get one.
Is she interested in single-sex education? The applicant pools for those schools tend to be somewhat self-selecting and so they tend to have somewhat higher admit rates than comparable coed schools of their caliber. Wellesley is a fantastic school with one of the most powerful alumnae networks in the world.
Does the community matter? In that case, Wellesley, Barnard and Tufts have the upper hand if she wants easy access to a large city (Wellesley offers the perfect blend of suburban campus with urban access, in my opinion) whereas Vassar is in a kind of dumpy minor urban area and Amherst in in a very small, but very erudite, town.
One important, and often underappreciated, thing that the more selective colleges use as a barometer is the applicant's perceived passion for the school. They will track every touch your daughter makes with the school, from initial inquiry through tours through campus days through application. They don't want to waste their time accepting students who are just applying to a slate of colleges but likely won't attend. So have your daughter start engaging the admissions offices at her top choices now and have her (note, it should be her) make contact with the admissions office and start showing that passion.
Also, what does she want to study? That matters, as each of those schools has distinct strengths and areas where they are weaker, so that is something to consider.
If she is going after small LAC's, has she considered Sarah Lawrence? Word is that they are under-enrolled this year, so they are going to be generous with grants as well.
My DS would rather be shot than attend an LAC in a cold climate (which is good because he doesn't have the grades for those kinds of places anyway), so I can't give you any personal experience with their applications processes. However, when you are in this cohort one hears things, and I hear that Williams is on everyone's list in that market; though I understand that it is a bit quirky; they use the Oxbridge "tutorial" class model.
Honestly, if you want firshand reports re: schools in that market, the best source is probably going to be HelicopterCentral, (i.e., CollegeConfidential). The tone of the place can be wacky as all hell, but folks who want old-name LAC's do tend to congregate there.
A Princess' Daddy makes some great points. I think the above bolded is something that is often overlooked, yet can be extremely helpful (and something that I will pass on to DD15 when she begins her college search).
A Princess' Daddy, do you live in Massachusetts? You seem to know the schools around here very well.
My DW and I are originally from the area (she's from New York and I'm from New England) and we both went to college in the Boston area (my wife went to one of the schools on OP's list and I went to another school in the area) and are basically college/university junkies. The way some people follow sports teams or tour baseball stadiums, we do that with colleges and universities around the country, but we especially love the schools back east. One of my best friends from college now works in the admissions office of our alma mater and shares with me lots of feedback on how complicated and competitive the admissions business has become, even since we attended, and I find is fascinating. Alas, at the present time we are not living in the area, but plan to move back at some point in the next few years, likely when or before my daughter gets to high school age.