- I applied to all the Ivy’s plus half a dozen other private undergraduate colleges. Got rejected from all.
- I assumed my ‘other’ credentials will make up for my low ACT score. I guess i was wrong.
- I scored straight A’s in my A Levels.
- I co-founded a company that has been successfully running for 3+ years now.
- I play a very popular sport at the state level.
- I expected to at least get into Babson (for its entrepreneurship program). But nope.
- Not an expert yet, but i can code (python, javascript).
On the plus side, i have saved 100,000+ USD that i can use as seed capital if i launch my company.
1. Look into universities in Continental Europe. Most are free or have low tuition and will still give you a solid education. I recommend somewhere in Germany, Austria, Sweden or the Netherlands. Depending on the city, $100,000 will cover your expenses for 5-10 years.
2. Spend the next year prepping for the SAT. Hire a private tutor, sign up for courses, etc. Then get a high score and reapply next year.
In some cities for $100k you can buy your own apartment and have some money to spare.
# 4-5 years of Boston snow or flambéing in Pasadena didn't seem appealing.
If you want to learn stuff for your own benefit, or for potential entrepreneurial application, I’ve gotten a lot out of Coursera over the years. There are many great courses covering a broad range of interests.
What is it you’re hoping to get out of college?
A relative of mine took that path (due to the crappy school he attended as a teen) and graduated as a chemistry honors student from a State University.
Reliance on ACT scores (yours isn't all that low!) is a mechanical, shitty practice. Route around the damage.
I suspect the Ivy leagues have enough domestic applicants that a very respectable, but not outstanding candidate with less well understood grades would not make the cut here.
Definitely check out some big state schools like University of Maryland, U of Wisconsin, U of Michigan. These schools have large research grants and funding, and they have access to some of the best large scientific computing platforms (HPC and Mainframes).
They may not have the entrepreneurial prestige, but they all have decent business schools in addition to great compsci programs, so you could dual major or minor.
Many of your peers are starting adulthood with $0. They are about to take on massive debt for a useless degree. All to become an modern day indentured servant to interest payments. For the rest of their life. It makes the old time 7 years of indentured servitude sound like a pretty good deal.
IMO I'd go for a local community college and do the first 2 years there, which is much cheaper. Also schools in EU are cheap/free not mortgage the damn house.
Also you can reapply, it is not the end of the world life for the majority of us is long... I got rejected from all 5 ivy-level biomedcial PHD programs I applied to, barring one with a late application date which I could still get rejected from lol.
Once you have answered it, it may turn out that it is not so important after all. My advise is to look deeper.
2. Go to a state college, it's infinitely cheaper for nearly the same thing.
If you are one of the rare few looking for the real value in attending an Ivy League college (relationships you’ll make with professors and other students), get a full time job - can probably even be a janitor if nothing else - at your university of choice, then audit your choice of courses as staff are generally allowed to do without any admission requirements.
Launch your next company. Invest in your ability to grow capital. Higher education is massively over priced right now, in general. I know firms who have hired lawyers for jack squat to replace paralegals because we have a glut of graduates. Graduates are serving drinks and driving ubers. You have a talent that a college cannot teach. Use it.
That describes maybe half of my coworkers.
The big things you lose by not going to college are dorm life and friendships/networking.
If so, check out /r/intltousa
Why do you want to go to college? You already have a career.