Rigor and Absences: New Harvard Policy

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The writers seem to blame it on careerism when really it’s just a lower quality student who doesn’t care about education. A lot of students are in it for the jobs, and don’t care at all about what they learn, shown by the rise of Econ and CS majors everywhere.


Maybe that is because you do not learn anything anyway….

I hire an avg of 8 kids from t10 schools every year for the last 15 years at an IB in NYC.
I’m yet to hire one who has learn enough. None of them know anything. I could care less if they took Class A, B or C. But if I give them a very complex real world problem, can they solve it? that is all I care about. I will teach them everything else I need them to know.


Investment Banking isn’t known for solving “complex real world problems”. If kids want to do that, they go work for companies trying to create nuclear fusion energy or DNA-based computer chips.

You know…actual complex real world problems. It’s laughable that you would combine that phrase and IB in the same sentence.


So, "trying" to do something that essentially no one actually does is the only "solving" complex real world problems? OK chum. Obviously IB work is super easy and that's why all the work is done for $7/day in Bangladesh slums.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The writers seem to blame it on careerism when really it’s just a lower quality student who doesn’t care about education. A lot of students are in it for the jobs, and don’t care at all about what they learn, shown by the rise of Econ and CS majors everywhere.


Test optional

And unlike Dartmouth, Brown and Yale, Harvard remained test optional this year.

Lower quality students


Harvard was test required this year. It was Yale that you could submit anything (including AP tests).
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The writers seem to blame it on careerism when really it’s just a lower quality student who doesn’t care about education. A lot of students are in it for the jobs, and don’t care at all about what they learn, shown by the rise of Econ and CS majors everywhere.


Perhaps at Harvard those majors are not rigorous. At many other universities they are. I know many smart kids from those majors (not from H).

Harvard has long been known as the hardest Ivy to get in, easiest to graduate from. Opposite of Cornell.


Like PP says, it matters very little. I need employee who are equal parts collaborative, analytical, quantitative and creative. Good luck finding these people in the most rigorous programs. Most of them lean anxious/rigid non collaborative.


That’s what the entire T30 student body is these days, now. That is what this admissions process heavily selects towards. The days of the quirky friendly geniuses are long gone.
Anonymous
Kids now are expected to enter college with the equivalent of a college degree from 30 years ago. Why should they bother with class?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The writers seem to blame it on careerism when really it’s just a lower quality student who doesn’t care about education. A lot of students are in it for the jobs, and don’t care at all about what they learn, shown by the rise of Econ and CS majors everywhere.


Perhaps at Harvard those majors are not rigorous. At many other universities they are. I know many smart kids from those majors (not from H).

Harvard has long been known as the hardest Ivy to get in, easiest to graduate from. Opposite of Cornell.


Like PP says, it matters very little. I need employee who are equal parts collaborative, analytical, quantitative and creative. Good luck finding these people in the most rigorous programs. Most of them lean anxious/rigid non collaborative.


That’s what the entire T30 student body is these days, now. That is what this admissions process heavily selects towards. The days of the quirky friendly geniuses are long gone.


They're at flagship honors colleges and LACs.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Actual link: https://www.thecrimson.com/article/2024/12/4/fas-leaves-of-absence-entrepreneurs-athletes/

This is for optics and a few egotistical professors who like having a crowd. Students watched recorded lectures decades ago.

Faculty is jealous that the school admits hard working go-getters who don't have time to sit in a hall with 300 students to hear something they already have on YouTube.

The policy says that class is 3hd lecture and 9hr homework. Missing 2 weeks of class doesn't mean missing homework. If there was actually an academic problem, it would show up in grades, and the kids would be on leave for a academic probation, not for hurting admin's feelings.

At top worldwide Universities, as long as you pass your final exam/paper, you can do whatever you want all semester. Student aren't children.


A) that's absurd. Don't have time? Wtf are they doing, curing cancer? B) Attendance isn't taken in huge lecture classes. This refers to the section meetings where the teaching actually happens.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The writers seem to blame it on careerism when really it’s just a lower quality student who doesn’t care about education. A lot of students are in it for the jobs, and don’t care at all about what they learn, shown by the rise of Econ and CS majors everywhere.


Perhaps at Harvard those majors are not rigorous. At many other universities they are. I know many smart kids from those majors (not from H).

Harvard has long been known as the hardest Ivy to get in, easiest to graduate from. Opposite of Cornell.


Like PP says, it matters very little. I need employee who are equal parts collaborative, analytical, quantitative and creative. Good luck finding these people in the most rigorous programs. Most of them lean anxious/rigid non collaborative.


That’s what the entire T30 student body is these days, now. That is what this admissions process heavily selects towards. The days of the quirky friendly geniuses are long gone.


They're at flagship honors colleges and LACs.


Not at the top LACs. You want me to believe there is a single quirky, friendly genius anywhere on the Swarthmore, Williams, or Amherst campuses these days? Please. Have you been on those campuses lately?

State schools — not even necessarily flagships — yes. That’s where the quirky friendly geniuses are.
Anonymous
The need to implement this new policy indicates how far Harvard has declined. Such a shame. They need to overhaul the admissions process and stop prioritizing legacy and rich private school students who don't take the gift of this education seriously. If they stop behaving like a corporate entity rather than a leading educational institution, would certainly help.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The writers seem to blame it on careerism when really it’s just a lower quality student who doesn’t care about education. A lot of students are in it for the jobs, and don’t care at all about what they learn, shown by the rise of Econ and CS majors everywhere.


Perhaps at Harvard those majors are not rigorous. At many other universities they are. I know many smart kids from those majors (not from H).

Harvard has long been known as the hardest Ivy to get in, easiest to graduate from. Opposite of Cornell.


Like PP says, it matters very little. I need employee who are equal parts collaborative, analytical, quantitative and creative. Good luck finding these people in the most rigorous programs. Most of them lean anxious/rigid non collaborative.


That’s what the entire T30 student body is these days, now. That is what this admissions process heavily selects towards. The days of the quirky friendly geniuses are long gone.


They're at flagship honors colleges and LACs.


Not at the top LACs. You want me to believe there is a single quirky, friendly genius anywhere on the Swarthmore, Williams, or Amherst campuses these days? Please. Have you been on those campuses lately?

State schools — not even necessarily flagships — yes. That’s where the quirky friendly geniuses are.



Yeah, I've been to all three and the culture was noticably more chill and friendly than the Ivies we visited. Maybe not Williams so much, but yes at Amherst and Swarthmore. But I also agree plenty of brilliant kids at state honors colleges these days.
Anonymous
Sorry, kids. Creativity and interpersonal skills can’t be cultivated in a classroom. Analytical skills and quantitative maybe but what good is that without the rest? A well-trained robot could do it. Oh wait, these days we call that AI.

These kids aren’t en masse at LACs or T20 either. We usually get them by referral. If not, we comb through thousands of resumes and look for evidence of both. We’ve had unexpected success with 2 college mascots.

Also very good employees come from other countries who are just more straightforward, which is good in a work-environment. I don’t want 2 hours of arguing over Shakespeare vs modern foreign trade. We’re setting up a business division for crying out loud.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The writers seem to blame it on careerism when really it’s just a lower quality student who doesn’t care about education. A lot of students are in it for the jobs, and don’t care at all about what they learn, shown by the rise of Econ and CS majors everywhere.


Test optional

And unlike Dartmouth, Brown and Yale, Harvard remained test optional this year.

Lower quality students


Yep. Those lax bros gotta go!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Sorry, kids. Creativity and interpersonal skills can’t be cultivated in a classroom. Analytical skills and quantitative maybe but what good is that without the rest? A well-trained robot could do it. Oh wait, these days we call that AI.

These kids aren’t en masse at LACs or T20 either. We usually get them by referral. If not, we comb through thousands of resumes and look for evidence of both. We’ve had unexpected success with 2 college mascots.

Also very good employees come from other countries who are just more straightforward, which is good in a work-environment. I don’t want 2 hours of arguing over Shakespeare vs modern foreign trade. We’re setting up a business division for crying out loud.


That's probably the opposite of both my experience and most stereotypes, but ok
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:The writers seem to blame it on careerism when really it’s just a lower quality student who doesn’t care about education. A lot of students are in it for the jobs, and don’t care at all about what they learn, shown by the rise of Econ and CS majors everywhere.


The problem is when a parent constantly monitors and dictates life for a student there is no intrinsic motivation on the student’s part. This is where helicopter/tiger mom method falls apart. Parent is no longer there forcing the student to get up and participate. I saw this all the time as a GTA.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:The need to implement this new policy indicates how far Harvard has declined. Such a shame. They need to overhaul the admissions process and stop prioritizing legacy and rich private school students who don't take the gift of this education seriously. If they stop behaving like a corporate entity rather than a leading educational institution, would certainly help.



Yeah, if they stop admitting deadbeats who know how to work the system to their advantage at all times, things will improve dramatically.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The writers seem to blame it on careerism when really it’s just a lower quality student who doesn’t care about education. A lot of students are in it for the jobs, and don’t care at all about what they learn, shown by the rise of Econ and CS majors everywhere.


Maybe that is because you do not learn anything anyway….

I hire an avg of 8 kids from t10 schools every year for the last 15 years at an IB in NYC.
I’m yet to hire one who has learn enough. None of them know anything. I could care less if they took Class A, B or C. But if I give them a very complex real world problem, can they solve it? that is all I care about. I will teach them everything else I need them to know.


It’s “couldn’t care less”.


PP has other grammatical errors, suggesting PP should not be opining on the academic qualifications of anyone.

"I hire an avg of 8 kids from t10 schools every year for the last 15 years at an IB in NYC." (Should be: "I have hired").

"I'm yet to hire one who has learn enough." (Should be: "I have yet to hire one who has learned enough."). Look up the difference between "I have yet to" and "I'm yet to."



Also, the "very complex real world problem" interview question is so MBA trend 2000. Not a good way to evaluate candidates. Why not make them take a personality test /s
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