+1. |
I understand what you're saying, but I think even kids at HYPSM would disagree that the purpose of their 4 years in college is to "create well-rounded thinkers." I think the explosion of CS at the Ivies (most of which are not that great at CS) shows how most college students, even those at HYP, view their four years as "coding boot camp" or like 4 years of pre-professional, high-end trade school. The book "Excellent Sheep" by a former Yale professor talks about this phenomena -- most Ivy kids are not all that intellectual and are just in it for the ROI. Whether or not this is a good thing is debatable, but I do think it's a bit naive to claim that elite schools are for intellectual exposure. |
This must be why people like to hire kids from SLACs. They are definitely about intellectual exploration. The opposite of trade school. If what you say about Harvard, I’m just as happy my kid didn’t get in (well, didn’t apply even though private counselor encouraged them to). |
The result of too many TJ-like students. Kids used to be more interesting. Know, it’s cram for classes, tests, and national awards. Yawn. |
| Any new info on this topic? |
True, but GPA is gamed at TJ by so many of the 4.5+ kids. There are a ton of kids with top GPA that avoided the hardest Post-AP classes until their senior year so the grade wouldn’t count for collage. These certain kids will fill their elective classes with only the AP’s that get easy A’s. Parents of these kids will scream at the school for the “right” (easier grader) teacher. For instance, there are two teachers doing Post BCCalc math. One actually teaches and grades hard but ok, the other can’t even answer questions past the script, grades really hard, and has a reputation. Some kids avoid all post AP Math classes till senior year, or only take the post APCompSci class in Web design/App design versus AI (Python) and Computer Vision (C++). |
No 1 for aerospace engineering |
Lot of very smart TJ kids are at Rice. They flourish. |
GaTech is very strong in STEM fields, #4 Best Undergraduate Engineering Program #1 Industrial / Systems Manufacturing Engineering #1 Aerospace / Aeronautical / Astronautical Engineering #2 Biomedical Engineering #2 Chemical Engineering #2 Civil Engineering #2 Electrical / Electronic / Communications Engineering #2 Mechanical Engineering #3 Environmental / Environmental Health Engineering #5 Computer Engineering #5 Materials Science & Engineering #5 Best Computer Science Program #3 Game Development #4 Cybersecurity #4 Data Analytics / Data Science #5 Software Engineering #6 Artificial Intelligence #7 Computer Systems #14 Programming |
| Georgia is not a safe school for a female student. Trumpism and forced birthers in the state proved that. |
Which one is going to help you make the money. Period. Better choose wisely or the money makers will go to the competition. |
So you wanted to hire white kids but not look overtly racist. Got it. |
| TJ is incredibly competitive so it’s hard to tell if admissions-wise kids who are good (but not the best at TJ) would have been better off staying at their base school. DC was a good student at TJ and was fortunate to receive acceptances by Northwestern, Cornell, Rice among others. But rejected or waitlisted from HYPSM, Duke, Columbia, Caltech, UPenn, Brown. At the time we wondered if an acceptance could’ve been earned from one of the latter 10 schools if DC graduated from regular public with everything else |
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Wow TJ and 4.0+ and still so hard..
Curious..are TJ kids with a 3.75 to 4 GPA and average EC profile, screwed? Are they worse off at TJ, compared to getting the same stats at their base school? |
If you are chasing prestige…yes. |