<p>All boy catholic school on LI, approx 400 per class, for our class of 2009 (371 class size)
Destinations alphabetically:
Boston College- 9
College of the Holy Cross- 16
Fairfield- 8
Fordham- 24
Loyola College in MD- 18
Marist College- 10
Northeastern- 7
Providence- 7
Univ of Delaware- 12
Univ of Richmond- 11
Univ of Scranton- 10
Villanova- 12</p>
<p>I’m very fond of Hunter College High School, a selective public high school in NYC, 7-12.
182, (CR 715, Math 713, Writing 703), Class of 2008:</p>
<p>Cornell 11
Brown 7
Binghamton 6
Hunter 6
Harvard 5
Columbia 5
Chicago 5
Duke 5
Yale 4
Princeton 4
Williams 4
WUSTL 4
Georgetown 4
NYU 4
Stony Brook 4
McGill 4</p>
<p>If I have a daughter, I’d like to send her there. I’d send my son to my alma mater.
My alma’s SAT means were CR 715, Math 704, Writing 713 (2008), if you’re interested.</p>
<p>Both socioeconomically, ethnically, and politically diverse schools.</p>
<p>Wealthy PUBLIC high school.
Our SAT average is not in the 700s…but then again we DON’T have to test in to get into the HS, and we DON’T have to pay tuition for the school (unlike privates) and it still serves us well
the cheerleaders around here drive around in golf carts and we are building a second state of the art swimming pool to connect to our current one.</p>
<p>My son’s school. Small, selective private school in Austin, Texas.</p>
<p>Arizona State University (2)
Auburn University
Baylor University
Blinn College
Boston University
College of Charleston
College of the Holy Cross
Colorado State University
Columbia University
Concordia University at Austin
Franklin College Switzerland
Georgetown University
Grinnell College
Kenyon College (2)
Lake Forest College
Middlebury College (2)
Pepperdine University
Reed College
Rhodes College (3)
Rice University (3)
Sewanee: University of the South (2)
Smith College
Southern Methodist University (2)
Southwestern University
St. Edward’s University (2)
Texas Christian University (5)
The George Washington University
The University of Alabama (4)
The University of Texas, Austin (3)
The University of Texas, Austin (Plan II)
The University of Texas, San Antonio
Trinity University (2)
University of Arkansas
University of Colorado at Boulder (3)
University of Georgia
University of Kansas
University of Miami
University of Mississippi
University of North Texas
University of Pennsylvania
University of Redlands
University of Rochester (2)
University of San Diego
University of Southern California
University of Virginia
University of Washington
Vanderbilt University (3)
Washington University in St. Louis
Whitman College
Wyoming Seminary (post-grad. year)</p>
<p>I guess just an average public high school in the suburbs in GA, and I read somewhere that the colleges most of us go to are West GA, GA State, and Kennesaw State. Some people that want to do technical stuff go to West Central Tech, since we can get credit from some high school classes. The band/chorus/drama crowd really favors Columbus State. Mercer offered a lot of scholarships last year but I don’t know how many actually chose to go there. Some of our top students go to Georgia Tech if that’s what they’re interested in pursuing, and that’s probably the only one I’ve mentioned that anyone on here knows, haha.</p>
<p>1) SUNY Binghamton
2) SUNY Stony Brook
3) Hofstra University
4) SUNY Albany
5) University of Delaware
6) Suffolk County Community College
7) SUNY Farmingdale
8) St Johns University
9) New York University
10) Cornell University</p>
<p>At my relatively small, not great school in Mass, the most popular schools UMass Amherst, UMass Lowell, and Stonehill, oddly enough. There were 170 in the last graduating class, and 7 went to Stonehill. 3 are going to Harvard.</p>
<p>Yeah i should have mentioned Georgetown, 6 kids are going there this year.</p>
<p>And i guess because Holy Cross and Delaware are convenient, not too far, but not in NY, both with good education to offer. To be honest, I really like Delaware too.</p>
<p>Nah, our school is extremelly similar to Cretin though. </p>
<p>But yea, badger game’s are fun, but nothing beats a Hill Murray-White Bear hockey game. Those are some of the best game’s ever with the Colliseum or Aldrich filled to the brim.</p>
<p>@Clockface - I think you’ll find you’re wrong about that But I’m from Georgia as well, so I’m not sure that counts.</p>
<p>I’d guess about half the kids in my magnet program end up at UGA or Georgia Tech, if not more. Those who can’t make it to the above schools go to Kennesaw or Southern Poly (lol Southern Poly), and there’s always a couple kids who take the sizable merit aid and go to Alabama. It’s sort of depressing, because I know there are a lot of us who swear up and down that we will get out of this state if it kills us.</p>
<p>It’s a good suburban school (well, the magnet is good) in a decently affluent area, but filled with tons of lethargic geeks, yours truly included, so usually not many kids get past Georgia Tech. Last year we sent one to Harvard, one or two to Penn, two to Duke, several to Emory and Vandy…and a couple went to good LACs (Hamilton, Grinnell). We are such a feeder school, really–it used to be unheard of for magnet kids to be rejected from Tech, but that’s changed with the past year. I don’t know much about non-magnet kids, haha, we kind of live in a bubble.</p>