Most are doing it so they can continue to admit kids from low performing schools |
Did you even read the research paper posted in the op ? |
Which is why the Caltech professors basically had a mutiny after only two years test blind to go back to test required and UCSD has had to start offering basic algebra classes? I hate to see your definition of not going well. |
I’m curious why you think this. Is it just virtue signaling or do you really think standardized test scores have no bearing on college performance? Is it that you think that college should be more about social engineering and less about producing graduates that can best make the country function? |
Incomes less than $200,000 is a different group than Pell grant eligible. |
This is not the case in the Ivy League, which is DI (or at least Ivys that are not TO). Scores need to be within range. They may be on the lower side of the school's range, but they're not low. People talk about the crazy high acceptance rate of athletes, but that's only those athletes that have been given the thumbs up by admissions previously based on GPA/scores. Many more don't get to the point of applying. |
Clearly did not read the article. |
There’s an important nuance here: kids from the top 20% of households do better on the SAT than kids from lower quintiles. But “upper middle class” kids (80-95th percentile incomes) do better on test-only admissions than they do on holistic admissions. That’s because a decent education, while often beyond the reach of the poor, is much less expensive than the other kinds of enrichment activities that very high income families can support. |
No one here read the article. They read a screenshot of an abstract on X. Embarrassing for a bunch of people who claim to care about rigor. |
| For those that refused to actually read even the abstract, the authors found that the wealthy and athletic recruits are the biggest beneficiaries of holistic admissions and focusing more on test scores would benefit the middle class. |
Focusing more on test scores would cause more middle class students to be admitted, if they applied. But how many middle class families would pay $50k for an elite school (assuming they get some FA) when they can instead attend a flagship for free? |
| The University of Austin is test score only admittance. They aren't interested in non merit academics. |
The definition of middle class here, earning less than $200,000, would make nearly all the top schools free. |
I’m not the poster ..: but I essentially agree. I have one of each … a high scorer and a low scorer . Both doing well in similar schools now. I don’t think SAT is destiny. |
Very few schools are free at $200,000. Even the handful that are, are only free “with typical assets” (which means: only if like a typical American you save nothing). |