<p>My son and I were both disturbed by another kid we met on a college visit. He intends to lie his way through college apps. He told us that he lied in his admissions interview that day!</p>
<p>At first I was drawn to him, as we overheard that he flew in from our area several states away and was clearly there all alone, and he seemed a little shy at first. But as we got to know him better throughout the day, it was clear that he was not "our type!" Several times throughout the day, he unabashedly told us of his plans to lie on his applications. "You can tell them you're the class president, or debate team president, or whatever you want. They're never gonna check." When we asked about his extracurriculars, he said he didn't really have any, but he's gonna tell them he did ... (I can't remember his details, but there was a list -- like editor for the school newspaper, debate team, band member, etc.). He kept mentioning that there's no way for schools to know what he's really been doing with his time.</p>
<p>He said he was #6 in his large high school class. I know his high school -- it's about 25 minutes away from my son's. It's probably a class of about 800 kids. He also said he has to retake the SAT because his scores were really low the first time. Furthermore, as #6 in the class, he was not selected for NHS, which we thought was odd, though we know that the schools in our area are pretty selective about NHS -- must have extracurriculars, or outside work, AND community service PRIOR to selection. I can't believe it didn't dawn on me at the time, but it occurred to me later that he has probably cheated to get ahead in high school too. He probably doesn't deserve his #6 rank. Or maybe he's not #6 at all!</p>
<p>Yuk! We were so turned off by this kid's attitude and intentions. He made me sad and mad at the same time. The school we were visiting is very selective. My son has great stats and extracurriculars, and doesn't expect that he'll necessarily get in. This kid said a few times, "Yep. This is where I'm going." He's a URM, and he knows it, and he seems to feel pretty confident that all he has to do is name his school. I'm not so sure. At least, in his case, I sure hope not.</p>
<p>Well, that's all. This experience keeps weighing on me. I guess it never occurred to me that kids go lying willy nilly, even at our nation's most selective schools, to try to get what they want but surely don't deserve. Have you ever had a similar experience?</p>