Umm... Okay...I have been told Jamnolfin has influence over the weather.
Umm... Okay...I have been told Jamnolfin has influence over the weather.
FSU yet again is outdoing themselves with application numbers and acceptance standards. He has a 4.9 weighted GPA, though his ACT could be a bit better - believe it was a 25 which is sufficient for CARE but on the lower end for regular fall acceptance. More than 47,000 kids have already applied for 6,200 openings.
yeah it's a fair question. he, like my daughter, is an IB kid. i noticed last year when my daughter was going through this process what seemed to be a disconnect between weighted GPA and standardized testing scores for the kids in IB (many of her friends seemed to be scoring ~ 27 / 1240 - not bad but seemed low for their ability). i don't know if it's IB in general under-preparing the kids for ACT / SAT or if it's the high school?Doesn't a 25 ACT and 4.9 GPA suggest serious grade inflation?
Just saw Fiji asked the same thing.
If you adjust the 4.9 for inflation, would that be like at 3.0 back in the day?
I have been told Jamnolfin has influence over the weather.
An AA from a community college in Florida will guarantee entrance to a state university, but not to a specific college or program.
I believe it's into a state university but not necessarily the one of your choice.Does an AA guarantee you into FSU or UF ? Or just some university. That's the part I haven't figured out yet
Now those kids are all grown up and probably the same ones who take their "emotional support animals" when they fly.Both my kids received private tutoring to prep for SAT/ACT. They were even tested to determine if they were best suited to score higher on one or the other. This was standard operating procedure in our neighborhood. There were kids whose parents spent a thousands to get them certified as having a learning difference so they could take untimed SAT. Somehow they got all the way until their junior year without an LD but suddenly now they have a situation! One scored well enough to get into Michigan from out of state, and the other unfortunate learning disabled kid went on to graduate from the University of Chicago. Go figure.
Back in my day, it got you into the state university of your choice, but not into any particular major. So you were guaranteed into FSU, but you might spend a semester or two trying to get into the College of Business. Not really a problem if you were serious about your chosen field of study.I believe it's into a state university but not necessarily the one of your choice.
I believe it's into a state university but not necessarily the one of your choice.
Does Santa Fe go all four years now?So which University is the Locker Room of the system, you know, the place where all the riffraff gets dumped?
She's in the admissions office or is she more of an academic adviser?Pathways basically replaced deferrals this year. The equivalent last year generally required that students enroll at another college for the fall (many enrolled at TCC), take no less than 15 credit hours, score no worse than a C in any class and have a GPA for the semester of 2.5 or greater. If the kids being brought in through Pathways have a lower high school GPA they may need to maintain a somewhat higher college GPA during the fall to qualify for spring enrollment.
Janice Finney typically heads up the spring enrollment - she is extremely helpful, an amazing wealth of knowledge and a die hard Nole.
Ms. Finney will set a curriculum tailored for the Pathway's students for classes to attend at their fall college. In most instances she already has this mapped out, the caveat being when kids are coming through Pathways that have a ton of college credits from AP, IB or dual enrollment.
My daughter had an option to take that untimed route (a pass was available to her due to later stage cognitive effects from pediatric chemotherapy). She chose not to. She wanted to earn her way in the same manner as her peers. I was supportive either way but proud of her decision. Kid works her ass off and deserves whatever she achieves.Both my kids received private tutoring to prep for SAT/ACT. They were even tested to determine if they were best suited to score higher on one or the other. This was standard operating procedure in our neighborhood. There were kids whose parents spent a thousands to get them certified as having a learning difference so they could take untimed SAT. Somehow they got all the way until their junior year without an LD but suddenly now they have a situation! One scored well enough to get into Michigan from out of state, and the other unfortunate learning disabled kid went on to graduate from the University of Chicago. Go figure.
ha ha ha. Depends on who is buying as to the accuracy!No, but I know @MaconNole best darn Nole weatherman alive.
Admissions wont tell us anything. Where you go to school has absolutely nothing to do with athletics.
Doesn't a 25 ACT and 4.9 GPA suggest serious grade inflation?
Just saw Fiji asked the same thing.
Congrats .As an update, my son has also been admitted to FSU and will begin in the fall. He was born in Tallahassee when I was still in school and has been a lifelong Noles fan. This is also good because we had already signed a lease for a two bedroom
GT is close to 70% male... and trust me that 30% of females does not resemble a sorority at FSU.
A couple of sayings have come out of tech:
From females: "The odds are good but the goods are odd"
On orientation day at tech: "look to your left and then look to your right... chances are only 1 of you will graduate from tech"
From every student who graduates: "The best two days at tech is the orientation and the day you graduate"....like I said not your typical college experience there.
What dorm will he be in for the Fall? My son is in Jennie now and will be in Dorman for the fall semester.As an update, my son has also been admitted to FSU and will begin in the fall. He was born in Tallahassee when I was still in school and has been a lifelong Noles fan. This is also good because we had already signed a lease for a two bedroom
My kids are sharing an apartment off campus, but very close to the stadium. Should be some fun tailgating this year. My son is also a bit older than the traditional student...sort of Bluto Blutarskied his first few goes at college. He seems to be focused now
I may have chosen the wrong place for my kids to live next semester - ugh.
Seriously? Health Department clearance come through??I may have chosen the wrong place for my kids to live next semester - ugh.
My daughter has a friend like that...top student, good performer, and scored a 1200 on his SAT, pretty surprisingly. Grade inflation is definitely a thing, but it's a pretty competitive school and nothing about his performance would indicate that he wasn't a really smart top notch student.
I know being a "bad test taker" is a thing, but I wonder if a lot of it really comes down to prep. When I was doing it nearly 30 years ago, I didn't know anyone who tested reasonably well that went through test prep. I knew a couple kids that just froze up horribly, and were like B- students who hit D+ type SAT scores, and they took some test prep that got them up to decent scores. But the idea of someone in the 1200-1300 range doing much prep at all, even practice tests, was pretty unheard of. Now, you've got very good scorers doing a ton of test prep to get exceptional scores.
In my day, a 25 ACT from a A student might have been a shade low, but not all that noteworthy among a bunch of 27s and 28s among their peers. Now, tons of those 27 and 28 kids are doing a ton of prep to put up 32 or 33.
Yep. I hit 30 on the ACT with no prep, which was on the high side for FSU at the time. Coupled with my 3.7 gpa I guess I’d be on the cusp of not getting in today. I see the prep situation as a bad thing. You aren’t getting a fair representation of ability, more pressure from parents and access to financial resources.
That can be true. That said, free resources, particularly the Khan Academy program I mentioned, are a game changer. I agree that the $3000 prep courses are a financial wall, and that causes a problem exactly like you mention.
With free programs coming on line now, it's potentially just the opposite, and a great indicator. Who wouldn't want to identify a student that went from a 28 to a 32 via their own hard work, versus someone who stood pat with a 28. If it's more a matter of personal volition than pure resources?
Compared to the way financial resources impact educational outcome of every step from infancy through school, free test prep online has the potential to be just about the most egalitarian aspect in the whole process (from one of the least). Pretty exciting.
I may have chosen the wrong place for my kids to live next semester - ugh.