A 3.0 and 1110 sat meets the index. And even getting a 33 is extremely easy relative to getting in as a non-athlete given the relative admissions rates of each (33 act applicants vs athletic recruit applicants) |
It’s odd that you think that “leadership” is some sort of rationalization. It is not at all uncommon for athletes, particularly those involved in team sports, to be good leaders- they tend to go on and use those leadership qualities as adults in their jobs and also in giving back to their communities as volunteers. (And, sure, non-athletes can also be leaders, but we’re talking about athletes here. Team sports really bring out and enhance natural leadership qualities.) Athletes are an addition to the mix of types of students at a school. No one would want a class to consist entirely of musicians or theatre kids or math whizzes or history buffs or . . . athletes. Schools want kids with a mix of interests and talents. And that’s who the admissions people work on bringing together. |
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I think colleges would all be better off if we kept a few revenue generating and profile raising sports, those might be the dirty secret admissions like donor class, and moved on.
So many rich kids getting into Princeton for sailing or water polo. It adds nothing. It's dumb. These kids bring nothing special to the table.The campus would be better off w more kids who have worked jobs or been the yearbook editor and gotten a 1550 |
| Ok, big deal they will graduate with 3.5s or 3.6s how else do you get an average GPA of 3.8 when everyone else is getting mostly As with an A- or two thrown in. |
it's fine for them. it's if you want to me be in a small seminar class with a kid who got a 19 on the ACT. |
Let’s get real: the scholar athletes getting into Yale via preferential athletic admission by and large go to very very good schools. These are the prep school kids or elite private school. Kids where tuition pushes $30-$60,000 a year just for high school. If they’re coming out of that environment with only a 1200 their parents should be pissed |
My thought is “How hard can this school be if these kids can be successful?” |
Remember, Yale has the highest number of football championships, even greater than Univ of Alabama. |
No they didn’t. You are just stirring the pot. But I personally know a girl who lost her commitment to Yale because she couldn’t break 1400 on her SAT. She’s at Northwestern. |
The hardest part is getting in. It’s always been that way at HYP for liberal arts. Athletes are taking easy majors like Government and STEM courses like Rocks 4 Jocks (intro geology). https://www.thecrimson.com/article/2013/5/30/the-easy-harvard-class/ |
Unless the private schools force the kids to take SAT prep classes your conclusion is a non sequitur. The SAT is not a final exam. It’s a complete separate, standardized test. And again, “only” a 1200 is a good score. |
| Why do you still want your kid to go to the school if you don't approve of their sports recruiting and spots for athletes? |
I heard it directly from the kid’s mother. She could be lying but why would she lie about that? |
Colleges love athletes. Even Caltech! |
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MIT loves athletes!
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