The SAT has never been a leveling tool and it's going away so get over it. No use crying over spilled milk. |
It happens in PP’s head, when she makes up sh!t to try and prove her point. |
| Colleges decide who is “under qualified,” not the disappointed parents of private school applicants. Stop claiming that your kid’s profile us the only acceptable definition of “qualified.” |
| Or maybe, because this year is TO, kids with 1100s and their parents decided to skip expensive test prep and multiple tests for a better and then super scored result. Which is fine. |
you are bringing ped state into this? high stat kids and mediocre stat kids get in there no problem |
Are you kidding? Many second-rate colleges -- and second-rate majors - exist on this. |
What are some second rate colleges? |
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I think the Covid cheating is a major issue.
MANY kids did not cheat <------disclaimer in case this is your kid. But many did. I know mine did. He did math in a group. He googled homework answers. I am not dumb. His friends all did it. Their GPAs are really inflated. There are hundreds like him. |
NP here. I don't agree with your statement, but I do agree with your sentiment. Over prepping has caused schools to do away with the SAT, more each year. |
Which is why they are doing away with scores, precisely. |
The bottom line is that what you have written above is mere conjecture. You think public school kids don’t work as hard as private school kids. You think public school kids are less qualified than private school kids. Are you really as ignorant as you are coming off? Come on! Do better! Any public school kids who get in deserve to get in. It sounds like you are a bit salty that you thought your kid had an advantage going to an expensive private school that most people can’t afford and now you feel you were burned. All your post reflects is sour grapes. |
Lol. It's so funny that they do act like they have no choice. |
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Hate the game? Definitely.
The problem is that very few kids can get great grades at some very competitive schools without cheating. I got sick of my DC getting crap grades during distance learning and moved DC into my home office so I could monitor them during the school day. I was appalled at all the cheating that is going on. It's actually so normalized that I don't think they even understand that they're out of line. It's different from when I was the smart kid in HS that everyone else cheated off of. Now, it's that they all exchange work with each other, even the smart kids. Granted, DC is at a super competitive HS so it's a different pool of kids than those I went to school with. But, if anything, this seems far worse ethically because these are the "top" kids who are cheating in order to achieve and maintain a high GPA. When I let kids cheat off my homework or exams 30 years ago, all that happened was the kid managed to pass and not flunk out of high school. Nobody was worried about how those kids' GPAs might nudge them out of the top 10% of the class or give them a leg up for college admissions. At one point in HS my kid was caught cheating on an assignment. We had to go in and meet with the teacher and punish our kid. But what was most upsetting was that when I spoke with DC about why they felt cheating had been necessary, their answer made total sense to me. There is no way that a kid who isn't a genius can keep up with the workload at a school like theirs. These are kids that are eventually passing the AP exams with 4s and 5s, so they aren't dumb. They know the material. But the sheer volume of work is unrealistic and is essentially an invitation to cheat. When the top kids in the class are "sharing" work with one another, everyone else has to do this in order to not fall too far behind and still sleep for at least 6-7 hours a night. It's a huge problem that's entirely created by stupid adults setting "higher" standards. My sibling is a high school teacher in Texas where one's class rank now determines whether you get to go to UT Austin and become a Longhorn. It's become a cat and mouse game with the top kids all devising new tricks to raise their GPA by 0.05 over that of their classmate. |
What is he planning on doing in college? Cheating? Good luck with that. |
Yes, this. I am the mom of 2 high GPA kids. One is a high test scorer, the other is a crapshoot on standardized testing. Both are fantastic students who bring a lot to the table. |