CogNeuroSci said:eyephone said:CogNeuroSci said:eyephone said:Is this rant about the options after HS?
CogNeuroSci said:Please don't misunderstand me. Troy, Oxford, Del Norte, Sagehill, Sunny Hills, they all have a bunch of tracks/tiers. So there might not be too much harm in letting your high schooler chill in the lower tracks at some of the best high schools, where they can stay out of the rat race at the top.
The problem is when the student and parents want the best at the top track but that school's AP/IB track doesn't match the rep/commercial.
It's like that famous sales mantra: What you don't know can't hurt you. I would amend that for the present context in the following way: What you don't know can and probably will hurt you; you just don't know it yet.
Yes, pretty much going to a high school that gives the student a REALLY good chance to get into the top colleges, and the IUSD high schools are no longer designed for that.
With all due respect. I think there are other threads that specifically talk about this in detail. That you should take a look at it that might answer your question. That includes someone that interviews candidates from a top tier school. (The process that an alumni interview the candidates. Certain schools top tier schools do this.) In addition, there are criteria that colleges have that not necessarily is the HS fault. Such as UC admission has a certain percentage of student per HS. The other threads talked about other extra curricular activities that colleges look at not just gpa. I think there are other things that I am missing.
There is only x amount of spots. You can not admit everybody. gg
So in that 2015 thread with WillJoy and Bones and you, there was some misunderstanding with what Bones meant when he said he sees a "humanitarian" trip to a third-world country as inauthentic. Bones simply meant it needs to be a real, extended effort over a number of years that shows real initiative and that the effort is a part of the student's life, not just signing up for a convenient vacation with, say, IvyMax's trips to Nepal or Ningsha, the latter of which is promoted as involving helping the local farmers with construction and modern farming technology but in fact involves students doing nothing but hanging out, digging holes in the ground for toilets that never arrive, and some students going into town to get alcohol or even dates/escorts.
Another similar activity is rocket club or robotics club. Lots of dead weight on those teams, people doing nothing but spectating and socializing/hanging out. Also, those rockets are same ol' same ol' baby stuff year after year after year, nothing close to a real rocket. Same with FBLA, one of the biggest fake academic extracurricular activities. Colleges and Bones can see right through these resume padders as lacking any real substance.
Now there will be applicants with similar activities that ARE deep, "uniquely" unique, and authentic, and people like Bones can easily tell when they see/hear it.
There is also a community college route. I think some people look down on it. But it may the cheapest and easiest way to a top college. idk