Slight divergence. Stop calling students lazy.
I was a high SAT scorer with mediocre grades a long time ago, in high school and in college I did not excel academically until law school. I got a 99th percentile LSAT and I graduated from a top 14 law school ordered the coif. I was, wait for it, undiagnosed ADHD. I have diagnosed ADHD kids. I am only weighing in to note that the high scoring low performing kids are not lazy. They are likely not well served by the structure of the school they are attending but doing well enough that nobody notices. Absolutely diligence/grit matters. So do many other factors. I also personally know a family member that got into Hopkins as a recruited athlete with relatively crappy test scores before test optional, really hard worker. They graduated Phi Beta Kappa in 3 years. |
Some top law schools want high gpa high lsat. Some top law schools want high lsat, willing to cut some slack on the gpa side. Most of these very high scorers went on to become successful lawyers. |
No. GPA is the only thing we have for academics here. In local high school, no one has ever cracked 1200 in SAT. GPA wise, we have about 20% students getting 4.0. DC’s dream school is Yale, that’s a long shot so they won’t get their hopes up. They are applying to multiple t20 test optional schools, may end up going to one of those. |
Fwiw I had an 1100 on the SAT, still managed to get into Maryland (back in the 90s), graduated phi beta kappa, summa cum laude, earned my Masters at a top school in my field and make a comfortable six figure salary. The SAT doesn’t determine your success in life. |
Ours has done well enough to enter the honors college at their university after admittance. High GPA. Is totally rocking it. 1300. |
My TO son just finished freshman year and is in no risk of losing his merit aid. Happy. Well adjusted. I know all the "tests should be required" people are just looking for some way to give their already privileged kids a leg up and they are also trying to justify paying for all those years of private school tuition, tutoring, and test prep. I guess it sucks when other people get the same (or better) outcomes without having to spend all that money (which was supposed to ensure that your child is "elite"). Oh well. |
My kids haven’t taken the SAT yet bc they’re in elementary school 😂 but are you aware that 1400 is 94th percentile?! And that about 62% of American teens graduate from college. Very few of them scored over 1400.
This board is not a good representation of real people or real life. |
"The test doesn't matter" folks are out in force here. As far as I know, the University of Texas is the only school that has released data on the performance of test optional students, and they did not do "fine." There's a reason most top schools have gone back to test required. Performance on standardized tests are still the most accurate predictor of college readiness. |
You are absolutely, 100% correct. |
A 1200 is considered above average and colleges are full of successful students with SATs below 1200. And anyone who writes “real college” is douchey and slimy. |
What is she actually majoring in? |
William and Mary TO students have been doing well. Wake has been TO for over a decade.https://news.wm.edu/2023/03/01/wm-extends-test-optional-admission-process-indefinitely/ |
This. It reminds me of the book “What Got You Here Won't Get You There” when I was trying to figure out what I needed to break through career wise. From what I have observed, in life it’s not a straight line where 1500’s on the SAT and high school GPA automatically leads to academic success in college, automatically leads to high performance on job, automatically leads to being very wealthy. When I look at who is the most financially successful in my family it comes down to being able to sell and/or own a successful business or being able to invest really well. News flash, SAT isn’t a prediction of those things. Going a step back to who does well in college, in my opinion high school performance and SAT within a range has some correlation to college performance but it’s nuanced. As someone mentioned 1350’s is still 90th percentile. So if someone in the top 10% in SAT score and also top x% at a competitive high school attends college - they could still be doing well compared to someone who may have scored higher on SAT or had a higher GPA. Work ethic, time management/executive functioning, knowing how to study, knowing how/when to ask for help, class selection (balancing classes) are all things that make the difference that are within their control. While there might be a floor where no matter how hard you work and have a grasp on all those other things, you will be so far behind all your classmates at x college for all four years - that floor isn’t a 1500 on the SAT and 4.0 GPA. That’s why lots of people are posting their TO kid below 1400 on the SAT is going well in college and it could very well be true. |
https://news.utexas.edu/2024/03/11/ut-austin-reinstates-standardized-test-scores-in-admissions/ The higher standardized scores translated on average to better collegiate academic performance. Of 9,217 first-year students enrolled in 2023, those who opted in had an estimated average GPA of 0.86 grade points higher during their first fall semester, controlling for a wide range of factors, including high school class rank and GPA. Those same students were estimated to be 55% less likely to have a first semester college GPA of less than 2.0, all else equal. |
I wouldn't dispute their data but other demanding schools have had different results. The biggest thing to remember, though, is that TO could encompass a huge range of scores. OP asked about kids below 1400, which can include a lot of kids in the 1200-1400 range. I'm guessing most of those kids are doing well in college. Mine is. But I will concede that TO kids who scored below 1100 may be struggling more at really demanding schools. We just don't have enough data to know the range of possibilities so we go with our personal experience (which is what OP asked about originally). |