大学申请是一次向光的生长
  • 2026-03-31
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大学申请是

一次向光的生长


没有枯燥的数据,没有焦虑的倒计时,于老师用一个生动而深刻的比喻,带G11的同学们重新审视眼前的升学之路:“大学申请,就像一具身体。”


NO.1

时间不等人,但我们心中有数

于老师开场就提到了两个关键词:Days and Deadlines。

“这是我们老师每年初会发的一个文件。”他说,从现在的3月到5月AP考试,6月到7月进入申请季,再到年底早申结束——这是我们年级此刻正面临的“时间节点”,希望大家始终保持心中有数。

时间确实在走,但我们不慌,因为我们知道接下来会发生什么。


NO.2

GPA是骨头,标化是四肢,AP是骨密度

“之前看过一个比喻,说GPA是骨头。”于老师说,“骨头不硬,人就立不起来。”

顺着这个思路,他展开了一个完整的“人体结构”比喻:

骨骼系统 = GPA

GPA是你整个人的脊柱。如果脊柱不好使,一切都无从谈起。

四肢 = 标化成绩(托福、SAT等)

标化是你赖以行动的“四肢”,决定你能走多远、跑多快。

骨密度 = AP成绩

同样的骨架,有的人立得稳,有的人骨质疏松——AP就是那个让你更扎实的东西。

于老师还调侃了一句:“希望那些AP生物满分的同学,别拿AP生物标准衡量我的生物水平。”——全场会心一笑。通过这样的类比,于老师希望孩子们充分理解大学申请对于他们个人的意义,从而有个清晰的概念要如何去搭建甚至健全自己的这具“身体”。





NO.3

血肉=活动与个性化

有了骨骼,还得有血肉。

“有些同学是强于血肉、弱于骨骼;有些则相反。”如果一个人只有骨架,没有丰满的血肉,那是没有辨识度的。

活动、竞赛、个性化的经历,就是学生们的血肉。

招生官看到的,不应该是一个“完美的模板”,而应该是一个个有温度、有质感、有辨识度的人。他鼓励大家尽可能地去探索、去尝试、去向大学招生官展示“活人感”,这才是从上千万份文书中脱颖而出地有效法宝。

NO.4


大脑=兴趣、洞察与思考力

思考与洞察力是很多中国学生身上缺失的。

来到国际学校,最重要的不是刷分,而是让自己成为一个有真正内在动机的人。

“大脑”是什么?“是你的兴趣方向、你的洞察力、你对世界的独立思考。只有大脑活了,整个人才真正立得住。”

在自我探索地过程中,针对自己的兴趣点可以具象深入的去调研、深究,尝试自主的去思考,发现问题甚至解决问题,比起书本指数,这样的能力才是真正难能可贵的。

NO.5


切记不是为了申请才生长


最后于老师叮嘱道:“不要紧张,不要害怕,只管往前走。”

因为——

大学要的不是完美的人,而是正在茁壮成长的你们。



The college application

 is a pursuit of light


 No dry data, no anxious countdown — instead, he used a vivid and profound metaphor to help everyone see the road ahead in a new light:

"College applications are like a human body."


NO.1

Time waits for no one,but we know the timeline

Mr. Yu opened with a key phrase: Days and Deadlines.

"This is a document our teachers send out at the start of each year," he said. From now, March, to the AP exams in May, then June and July marking the beginning of application season, and finally the end of early application deadlines at year's end — these are the 'milestones' our grade is facing right now. We want everyone to keep them in mind.

Time is indeed passing, but we are not panicked, because we know what's coming next.


NO.2

GPA is the bones,standardized tests are the limbs,AP is bone density

"I once saw a metaphor: GPA is the bones," Mr. Yu said. "If your bones aren't strong, you can't stand up."

Following that idea, he expanded into a full "human body structure" metaphor:

Skeletal system = GPA

This is your spine. If your spine doesn't work, nothing else matters.

Limbs = Standardized test scores (TOEFL, SAT, etc.)

They are the limbs that let you move — determining how far and how fast you can go

Bone density = AP scores

With the same skeleton, some stand firm, others have osteoporosis — AP is what makes you more solid.


Mr. Yu also joked: "Especially those of you in AP Bio who are either betting or getting perfect scores every day — don't use AP Bio to judge my biology level." — The room chuckled knowingly.


NO.3

Flesh and blood =Activities

With bones, you also need flesh and blood.

"Some students are strong in flesh and blood but weak in bones; some are the opposite," Mr. Yu said. If a person has only a skeleton without rich flesh and blood, they lack identity.

Activities, competitions, and individualized experiences — that's your flesh and blood.

What admissions officers see should not be a "perfect template," but a person with warmth, texture, and distinctiveness.

NO.4


The brain=interests,insight,and thinking ability

"This is something many Chinese students actually lack," Mr. Yu said.

Coming to an international school, the most important thing isn't chasing scores — it's becoming a person with genuine intrinsic motivation.

What is the "brain"? It's your direction of interest, your insight, your independent thinking about the world. Only when the brain is alive can the whole person truly stand firm.

NO.5


Finally,you are not growing just for applications

Although different countries place varying emphasis on parts of the "body," Mr. Yu left us with a sentence worth remembering:

"When we have truly grown, the body itself is no longer that important. Not everything has to be viewed through a utilitarian lens."

If you're starting a bit late now, it's okay.

he added: "Don't be nervous, don't be afraid — just keep moving forward."

Because —

Colleges don't want perfect people — they want people who are thriving and growing.



文案:Yutong

排版: Yutong

审核:Sophia



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