Just because you can’t tell the difference doesn’t mean others can’t. |
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You would need to REQUIRE scores. One sitting only is able to be provided. Not pick and choose subjects from different dates.
I don't know how you would adjust for the differences among schools and what they offer and the rigor. Some schools are on a strict 4.0 scale with no APs, some have honor which give an additional 0.5 per grade. Some schools have 18+ APs offered and kids take nearly that many while others may offer only in a few main courses and kids take 4-7. |
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Because different schools have different departments, endowments and strengths. Your lottery does not select for the students needed to fill out the different program areas.
How quickly would our universities devolve into technical schools? A pure lottery and all of a sudden the HYPs are 80% CS students. Think... |
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The brutal truth is that we (regular people) do not get to decide how colleges and universities should "just" do this or that. They've stated very clearly that they want a racially, economically, religiously, and geographically diverse group of kids.
You may think that is worthless, but you won't be able to convince them of that by complaining on an anonymous message board. |
You don’t actually have any right to be seriously considered for admission to a private institution. Or to have an equal chance. That’s not a thing. They are free to choose whoever they want for their classes. The SCOTUS ruling doesn’t change that. |
Because “qualified” is just a baseline. The intangibles matter. Including the demographic makeups of the student body. |
Why on earth do you think that is the end goal? |
Well, yes. Lots of discrimination is perfectly acceptable. When you choose a side salad with your meal instead of French fries, you discriminated. That doesn’t make it wrong. Discrimination in and of itself isn’t inherently wrong. Discrimination for some REASONS is unlawful. But I mean universities discriminate against every student with an SAT below 1500 in OP’s scenario…. That’s discrimination… |
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Why don't people understand that college and work after college is about way more than grades and scores?
Colleges do not just want the people with those numbers. They never did -- no school ever only took the top grades and the tops scores. Literally never. When did this narrative begin? Where did the idea come from? |
I agree with this! If folks hate the values of these schools so much, why are they dying to get in? Seems they don’t know anything about the schools other than the ranking (which is really evident when kids apply to all Ivies as if they are interchangeable). |
Especially using a test that has been statistically shown to have a disparate impact based on race. |
Tried that with "common core" and it was a disaster. Stop with the standardized testing. In lower income schools, it often meant teachers spent a good 20% of their time "Teaching to the test" I knew schools that spent the first 15-20 mins of everyday in ES with the kids taking "mini standardized tests" then grading them and going over them. Every. SIngle.Day. 30 mins of the day "wasted" IMO. Rather than just focusing on teaching math or reading they focused on test taking. And teachers and schools were penalized if kids were "below level". But there was no rationality to the process: for example, if a class of 3rd graders came in reading at 3rd month of K as an average level, and in May of 3rd grade they are reading at the 2nd month of 2nd grade, those kids are "below grade level" on paper. But using a bit of common sense tells you those kids made HUGE progress---they advanced 2 grade levels (minus 1 month) in less than 1 school year!!!! That should be celebrated, this teacher finally reached the kids, the kids were finally able to learn and advance. They should not be punished because they are "below grade level". Yet that is exactly what happened. |
+1000 It is only state schools that guarantee admission to the Top X% of the HS grads in their state (of their individual HS class). And even then, they do not fill the entire class that way. 90% of students must be in state at UTexas Austin. 75% of those in-state slots must be guaranteed, so 25% of the instate slots are open to other instate students. The remaining 10% overall is typically OOS, as who doesn't want OOS tuition flowing. But that is about as close as you will come to a lottery. Which is fine for in-state schools to do, if they wish. Most states have a much smaller percentage guaranteed if at all |
Right, what OP had overlooked is the fact that admissions are not about the student, they are about building the class. |
DP. But, that's not what Harvard wants. They want to build a class with a diverse blend of backgrounds and qualifications. When will parents here figure out that this is not about their kid? The school wants to build the class it wants for whatever reasons it wants -- it's not just about academics, and for that matter, academics are not just about GPA and test scores. |