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This info is pretty fascinating if you look at the breakdown of test scores relative to legacy and athletic recruits. (And we all know that athletic recruits at Princeton mostly = privileged white people doing sports like crew, lacrosse, etc.):
https://projects.dailyprincetonian.com/frosh-survey-2028/academics.html |
| It clearly shows how much smarter legacy kids are than non-legacies - significantly higher SAT and ACT scores, legacies have basically no chance without 1500+. |
How do “we all know” that? Is it in the data? I thought black people could be good at crew and lacrosse and I would definitely expect the average track team or basketball team to include a lot of black people too. |
Thinking about all the travel and crew lacrosse teams available to the middle and lower middle income families of my city. |
And yet parents of athletes always seem to maintain on this site that they are just as qualified, would have been admitted anyhow etc. Delusional. |
Now adjust for income and private school (binary explanatory), and you'll actually be able to make this conclusion. |
Recruited athlete college application is its own thing. For the D1 schools the students literally sign their contracts on Nov 1st, long before they could even possibly have been compared with non athlete applicants. Even for Princeton and the other Ivies, the colleges send them "likely letters" before applications are due, then the students submit EA/REA/ED whichever early process the school has and have an over 90% admit rate. The athlete's themselves are so confident that they will be accepted many of them post in advance on social media during the summer of their senior year . . . |
Exactly. The only thing analogous is Questbridge. |
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You can't lump legacy in with athletic recruits. Those are very different admissions process. Legacy essentially has to have all
The basic criteria that a normal Admit would. Athletic recruits have an entirely different process and required stats. |
Totally agree and the data in this student survey shows that clearly. Despite claims in several places on this form the legacy admits have higher standardized test scores. They aren't the ones needing TO. . . |
Whitesplaining 101 |
In order to make the process seem somewhat legit (which is a joke), I have seen Ivy League athletes post that they "have committed to go through the admissions process at" the school. The legacy data is exactly what I expected. For all of the drama about the rich legacy kids who are underqualified and only got in because mom/dad gave a big gift, the vast majority are highly qualified. Smart people have smart kids. Smart people prioritize education for their kids. Smart people tell their kids that if they want to grow up to be like mom and dad, they have to study really, really hard like mom and dad did. As has been repeated ad nauseum, these schools get tons of super qualified applicants. So legacy might be a tie breaker among highly qualified kids. That's about it. And to those who say that most recruited athletes are rich white kids, here is a picture of the 2024 Princeton football team. I see a lot of minority athletes there. The basketball team is probably half minority. So yes, there are more rich white kids in yachting or golf, but as a whole, the athletics department likely mirrors the demographics of the whole university. https://goprincetontigers.com/sports/football/roster |
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athletic recruiting is a joke at ivy and top nescacs - absolute joke
Princeton and Columbia - as well as Amherst and Williams- the biggest jokes as they are still able to use TO approach for even more sub par athletic applicants |
Say what you will about athletes, but this is not accurate. You can only get a liklely letter after you apply. They look at the application before issuing one. |
I'm pretty sure that they don't say that they would have been admitted anyway. Nobody should ever assume that. They are just as qualified because they crossed the academic bar set by admissions. Let's face it, the problem isn't with the athletes themselves but rather that athletic skill is so valued by Princeton. |