I was browsing here, and found the earlier question about what Harvard looks for. Most of the people who replied said they wanted famous people, or people with famous parents, or people who had families of Harvard alumni. I'm willing to believe that the bit about being famous is an exaggeration, but hasn't Harvard got a reputation for its academic quality? Why would they look at anything past grades and extracurriculars?
If my question seems dumb, excuse my ignorance; I am a highschool freshman attending a public highschool, and aiming for an Ivy League school or the equivalent. My family isn't rolling in dough; to put it briefly, how many middle-class students actually get accepted into Ivy-type schools?
2006-12-14
20:00:00
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6 answers
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asked by
Anita
5
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Education & Reference
➔ Higher Education (University +)
A certain percentage of Harvard students have rich parents, and they can afford exclusive advisors who knows exactly what Harvard is looking for.
An individual from the middle class must show Harvard that he or she is smart (based on standardize tests scores), willing to hard hard (based on high school GPA), and a leader (based on initiatives taken in schools and in the community and recommendations). Harvard gives out need based aid, so it makes sure you can afford an Harvard education when Harvard admits you.
You have plenty of time
Good luck : )
2006-12-15 04:51:58
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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How convenient. Today, December 15, Harvard sends out its decisions to early applicants. I'm a middle class student looking to get in, and I've studied a lot about the subject. Here's what I've found.
There are tens of thousands of students that apply to Harvard each year. Of these, there are probably ten thousand applicants with credentials good enough to be Harvard students. They all have awesome test scores, lots of extracurricular activities, and so on. So how do they decide who's going and who's not? They go through again and find people who are especially dedicated to service or sports, or people with perfect scores, and so on. One of the things that makes people stand out is having famous or rich parents.
Plus, rich parents usually pay for more things that make kids have better test scores and so on.
2006-12-15 03:30:00
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answer #2
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answered by Tailpipe 3
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I think the reality is that small percentage of Harvard freshmans do get into the school by unethical supports from whoever. But, I think those kids are mostly highly educated that they would probably do well in Harvard anyways, maybe not. Still, I think if you do well in school(GPA close to 4.0), volunteer like a crazy person, and get good recommendations, and do well on SAT, then you will have a chance. You have to consider that there are many many people who apply to Harvard each year and they are usually on top of their games. Oh, from what I saw when I was in high school, a friend who went to Columbia didn't do much, but he took bunch of AP classes and had 4.0 GPA, I assume he aced the SAT. Well, I think if you do something like that and more, then Harvard would not cut you off. I think you have to do much more than that to get in. If you are good, no matter you are poor or not, they will help you to get into their school. I had talked to one of the recruiterswhen I was in high school.
2006-12-14 20:14:11
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answer #3
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answered by wat~ 3
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If you feel you might not be able to make it in due to lack of money, why not aim for scholarships? Immerse yourself with community involvement projects, take up more leadership roles, aim to be an all-rounder. It's definitely easier for students in USA to get into creme of the crop Universities and Colleges, unlike foreigners like us.
2006-12-14 20:06:31
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answer #4
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answered by anonamos 1
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they have extra pressing concerns to attend to i'm guessing, i does not comprehend no remember if it extremely is ordinary or not. it extremely is an tense question to ask somebody. Do your very own study, not in basic terms ask somebody what to do. the suggestions is *with no difficulty* accessible. bypass to their website to illustrate.
2016-12-30 11:03:40
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answer #5
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answered by ? 3
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Dunno about Harward, but Stanford accepts on the basis of grades. Also, some state schools are quite good, like UCLA and Berkeley.
2006-12-14 20:09:18
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answer #6
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answered by Snowflake 7
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