no contact from schools these days..

<p>these days, i have no contact from any of the schools..
no letters, no postcards, no wtever. </p>

<p>yeah I got the christmas postcards, but no other personal stuff. exeter used to send in ALOT of stuff. i heard deerfield send a whole lot of stuff to everyone, but i'm not getting anything. my application isnt even confirmed complete yet, due to the tremendous amount of applications. </p>

<p>i'm not getting anything these days! is it because it's the time of the year when they're so busy reviewing apps (i sent an email to andover, i was replied back w/ an automated reply that they're too busy with apps), or did they just lose interest in me?</p>

<p>PS what can you do to "capture" their attention? emails? i'm not too sure, i think i'm getting way too paranoid (lk oh, what if i dnt get in, wht if there's someone way more talented than me, etc.)</p>

<p>There is someone way more talented than you; there's also someone way less. The Schools are swamped, the admissions' officers all have bad cases of coffee breath and bleary eyes, everyone's doing their best. Try not to read the tea leaves because there are no leaves to read right now. You may want to consider just forgetting about boarding school as much as you're able. Coming to this site doesn't help. Throw yourself into your daily life and work.</p>

<p>I get to quote myself!

[quote]
ISL schools are about to enter into a quiet period. This is from St. Mark's admissions newsletter: "Independent School League policy prohibits administrators, special interest teachers and coaches from contacting prospective students between February 10 - March 10. As member of the ISL, St. Mark's agrees any communication initiated by faculty members or coaches be directed to the parents and not the applicants."</p>

<p>So, don't panic if you don't hear from coaches, admissions people, and teachers from the schools listed below.</p>

<p>Belmont Hill School
Brooks School
Buckingham Browne & Nichols School
The Governor's Academy
Groton School
Lawrence Academy
Middlesex School
Milton Academy
Noble & Greenough School
The Rivers School
Roxbury Latin School
St. George's School
St. Mark's School
St. Paul's School
St. Sebastian's School
Thayer Academy

[/quote]
</p>

<p>The schools which are not ISL schools may very well have a similar policy. So, no news is not bad news. They're very busy right now. </p>

<p>Remember, schools will see the grades from the current semester. Keep up the good work.</p>

<p>I sent a quick email to my the schools my daughter is applying to telling them to expect a fax from her guidance counselor with her current grades. The email was quick and to the point with no expectation of a reply. (They did all say reply anyway). I also sent via mail, a copy of a very recent newspaper article about a play my daughter was in because the picture featured her. My note was again, short and breezy.
It has been quiet on our front too.
ZP</p>

<p>I'm not sure what you expect them to be sending you. As I recall last year, after the applications were all completed there was no further communication from the schools until the acceptance/denial letters came out.</p>

<p>Does anyone have a link to that article that explains what the AYSO generation is, and why they have a constant craving for reinforcement and attention? I can't find it on Google.
The AYSO Generation started approximately 20 years ago when all players (win or lose) received trophies, and everyone became a winner, and it continues into today.
It's not a bad article.</p>

<p>What does "AYSO" stand for? I can't figure out the acronym.</p>

<p>Sarum hit the nail on the head. </p>

<p>I've received an email and a call from my interviewer(only 1 school doesn't have it all in... recs and grades are blank). He was pretty blunt, "(My name), get your stuff in. You gotta help yourself in this process by making it easy."(I paraphrased to not make my identity apparent... I assume a few of these calls went out)</p>

<p>Must be AYSO, and I'd love to see the article if someone can find it! </p>

<p>Think about how not to bother the adcoms unnecessarily, not how to remind them you are around and waiting anxiously to hear from them. They know that!</p>

<p>Trophy Atrophy</p>

<h2>These Days, Everyone Is a Winner</h2>

<p>Tuesday, December 9, 2008
By Starshine Roshell (Contact)</p>

<p>They're the first things you see when you enter my son's room, and the only things he packed when a wildfire neared our home.</p>

<p>They're 10 golden, gleaming trophies, each touting him as a "winner" at T-ball, soccer, basketball. The most recent is a pewter mega-monument he earned playing football—on a team that lost every game by about 30 points.</p>

<p>While certainly a winner in my book, the kid has never once been on a championship team. Or even a mediocre one. Still, he has received more trophies than birthday cakes in his life. And he's not alone.</p>

<p>Mini-athletes get trophies these days just for showing up. They're de rigeur, as much a part of kids' sports now as Gatorade and ghastly, costly team photos. At the end-of-season pizza party (also a given), every team member gets a sizable statuette on an engraved pedestal. Play-off teams probably get bigger ones; ahem, I, wouldn't know.</p>

<p>"Claire got a soccer trophy even though she sat on her fanny and cried through every practice," says a mom I know.</p>

<p>What's the cost of being so generous with awards that were once reserved for the best of the best? Are we championing mediocrity? Will our kids expect “atta boys” for everything they do?</p>

<p>"There is a definite shift toward an 'everybody wins' attitude in sports these days," says a local dad. "It's good and bad." Getting a trophy was his five-year-old daughter's favorite part of her first soccer season—which explains why, at the start of the next season, she came off the field asking, "Where's my trophy?"</p>

<p>Trophy inflation seems to have started with the self-esteem movement of the 1980s, when pop psychology convinced us that "effort" matters more than "success." Some called this progress; others deemed it hogwash.</p>

<p>"I abhor awarding trophies willy-nilly," says a soccer, basketball, and baseball coach. "I have strong suspicions the trophy industry is behind the 'trophies for everyone' tradition." An outrageous accusation? Perhaps. "I suspect the Trophy-Industrial Complex is behind the subprime debacle, as well."</p>

<p>In real life, loss comes frequently—elections, jobs, relationships—and it forces us to reassess our performance and try harder next time. Isn't it better to let our kids taste disappointment now, when the terms are small, than to "protect" them from it till they're grown?</p>

<p>A friend of mine who works in human resources says that, as young adults, the "participation trophy generation" exudes a distinct sense of entitlement. "We don't give merit raises," she finds herself explaining, "just for doing your job."</p>

<p>But not everyone is anti-trophy. Proponents say the token effigies bolster kids' spirits after a brutal season.</p>

<p>"We aren’t rewarding them for not winning," argues one coach. "We're rewarding them for showing up regularly, practicing, working as a team, learning the skills and rules of the game, playing through disappointment and pain."</p>

<p>Well, when you put it like that ...</p>

<p>"Kids can be so hard on themselves and feel undeserving even when they played well," adds my cousin, whose children play up to four sports at a time. "Some kids have uber-competitive parents and a little trophy may be their only positive reinforcement."</p>

<p>It's a fair point. It's not like we've stopped scoring the games; kids, it turns out, are keenly aware of the difference between bench-warming trophies and VIP trophies. And while they may treasure a thanks-for-playing memento as a souvenir from an exacting season, they'll be the first to tell you this: It's small consolation for failure.</p>

<p>"There are only three trophies I'm really proud of," says a sensible fifth-grader I know, who has won big in soccer, hoops, and music. "The rest I call 'loser trophies' because you get them for losing.</p>

<p>"I actually think they're a waste of metal."</p>

<p>This is not the article I was looking for. The right one was WSJ I think.</p>

<p>I got a postcard from Andover yesterday...</p>

<p>I got one too, I think everybody gets them. They tell you that your application is complete. Right?</p>

<p>yea everyone gets them, i was just trying to say that they are trying to keep us at bay from sending tons of emails, by confirming our applications.</p>

<p>My D received a phone call from a student at a HADES school today, who wanted to know if she had any questions about the school. Anyone else receive a similar phone call? I know everyone will ask what school, I will not say here, but if you absolutely must know, pm me.</p>

<p>^ I think that usually happens. When I was applying, I got phone calls asking if I had any questions.</p>

<p>Darn, I was hoping it was an indication that she was going to be accepted and they wanted her to attend the school.</p>

<p>Don't we all :]</p>

<p>i doubt schools would have the time of day to contact you if they were getting bombarded by envelopes after envelopes, harry potter style, to the point it becomes a hazard zone.</p>