+1 A good thing Dartmouth did was establish a "qualified" SAT benchmark of 1400. The "but I got a 1450 or 1500...not fair!" types can shut up. |
You have spent thousands on college tuition. You’ll be spending around $250-300K. Not an easy thing for any FGLI student & your kid is an example of the upper middle class students getting an admissions bump b/c JR as PP stated. I commend you for admitting that you are a full-pay ED family. Most DCUMers like to fib. |
They've recruited from McKinley and Banneker in recent years so they're probably making inroads elsewhere as well. 11% of the freshman class is Black. What you may have observed is something common amongst top schools. A lot of first-generation Black Ivy kids are first or second generation Americans. |
Is Dartmouth really having trouble identifying qualified kids? Or just the right kind? |
That may be true, but these kids introduced themselves and they were not from the US. I wouldn't be surprised if Dartmouth double counts to boost their numbers. Also, when did the terms URM or students of color become code only for black students? I'm sure you didn't mean anything negative - just making you aware. |
PP was implying JR kids struggle at college…my kid actually scored a 1550, so maybe if from JR that made my kid almost a sure admit, but not a low score. I actually don’t deny we may be benefiting from JR’s overall low scores, but that doesn’t mean kids are struggling at top colleges. |
TO made it difficult for Dartmouth to determine whether a kid had the chops to stick out through four years and thrive. TO allowed kids to gain admission who were not prepared for the rigors and thus needed to draw extra on the school’s resources (tutoring, advising, mental health services, etc) and/or drop out of the school (which is bad for Dartmouth’s ranking, waste of financial aid, and maybe saddling the kid with debt but no degree). Basically, Dartmouth thinks that going back to the SAT will allow them to better identify under-privileged kids who need less hand-holding. |
I thought that was interesting, too. The article said that for kids who took the test but didn’t report, the schools are able to see the scores after the application cycle ends. That was the important analysis and the key findings: many kids didn’t report scores thinking they weren’t high enough to help them, but in fact, those scores would have helped them. The key insight from the article to me is that Dartmouth isn’t interested in the 1490 vs 1500, they are looking at whether the score meets s much more basic threshold that suggests the ability to handle the work and succeed at it. And it suggests that the vast majority of DCUM kids should be reporting scores that so often are dismissed as unimpressive here. |
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I think test optional did not help my son, a high-scoring student. It will come too late for him but I am so glad Dartmouth (and hopefully many others) go back that route.
FWIW, at a summer tour of Dartmouth I met an economist (none of the 4 who wrote the piece) who said that he had taught for nearly 30 years and his grade distribution had never been quite so erratic as in the TO years. Dartmouth may spin it the way they have in this article, but they will ALSO benefit from keeping out kids of affluent families who snuck in behind TO. |
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More announcements will likely be made in the near future ... from The Dartmouth…
“Other institutions are also considering a return to test-required admissions, according to Coffin. “All of our peer schools are studying it, as we just did,” Coffin said. “I think the question is a really straightforward one: Does the college see an opportunity from the inclusion of more data in the application? And if the answer is no, you don’t need the SAT.”” |
amen to this. though i will be the first to admit my kid only took the SAT once and his score was his score. |
If anything good comes the Supreme Court decision, it might be that this changes. If colleges want to help disadvantaged students, they should start paying local taxes that support public schools, rather than importing upper middle-class people who "look like America." |
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The article is fascinating not only with respect to the study findings, but by shedding some additional light on the inner workings of the college admissions process at top schools. Love the use of data to disprove what’s become accepted and commonplace over the last few years.
- Dartmouth alum |
there are noticeable differences between a 1200 and 1600 test taker but how many classes are curved these days in college? Or what make things competitive? Genuinely curious. Like are 1200s kids committed to treating college like a full-time job without weekend rugby or d3 squash not able to grind out cum laud or magna cum laude at a competitive university if they make sure to take a few less rigorous courses or paper based courses known for easy A-/As to pad the gpa? |
Your kid with a 3.7UW and a super scored 1540 still isn’t getting in. |