Harvard has always prided itself in having a diverse class, in every respect. Every state, every major, every race/ethnicity, many countries etc. And now does have a heavy focus on first-gen opportunities. Zero wrong with any of this. |
+1 Well stated. So many smart people posting on DCUM don't get this important point. Colleges are much more interested in potential than achievement. |
Plus part of the "charm " of many T25 schools is the smaller size. Harvard would not be Harvard if they had 20K undergrads. |
well, holistic admissions, and "likeability" was added by these colleges as a way to discriminate against Jews. And yet, we still have it. At least a URM can study for SATs, but no matter how "likeable" an Asian American student is, the AO can just mark them as "unlikeable" without ever having met the applicant. Seems holistic admissions is far worse in terms of discriminatory practices than SAT scores. |
So if you do not like the US system, you obviously are free to attend/send your kids elsewhere. While our system is not perfect, I consider it to be 1000x better than ones that start tracking 10-12 yo. If your "top stat kid" does not get into an elite/T25 school, they have over 2000 other choices in the US, and will get into many in the 25-60 range (unless their application and visits demonstrate an elite attitude of "I'm too good for your school" which is quite possible from the parental attitude.) There are so many excellent choices. You need to recognized that it's not where you go but what you do while there. |
+1 Just sour grapes from the PP. |
Amen. And thank god we are not like China or Europe. Who wants a system where your entire life trajectory is determined by one exam you take as a CHILD?? |
It is not discriminatory to desire a balanced, richly diverse cohort. This means that there is a quota for every single conceivable category, not just race/ethnicity. And that test scores are merely one factor in a holistic review, and not the most important one beyond a certain threshold. There are many colleges in the world that admit based solely on test scores, yet those countries are much less well known for innovation and social mobility. You are welcome to focus on those. |
Firstly, getting rejected at a "highly rejective school" is not discrimination. It's statistics. 95% of those applying are "highly qualified" yet 95% will get rejected---it's nothing special against your kid, just that they didn't win the lottery along with the other 95% Oh the horrors. A kid was rejected at MIT/Stanford/CMU/Harvard so they end up at GaTEch. That kid will also be just fine at a CWRU/RPI/similar schools. They will get their CS/Math/Eng degree and work alongside kids from MIT/Stanford/etc....assuming they can somehow recover from not attending a T20 school and find their path in life. Keep us posted with how they do |
Exactly. There’s a reason why US universities are considered the best in the world. And it’s not just about the test scores of their students! |
I am shocked at the narrow-minded thinking behind the supposition that test scores and GPA should amount to the sole criteria for admission to elite schools. The lack of nuanced, complex thinking here is mind-boggling. |
+1 I like this list of where NASA engineers went to college--almost all public universities. https://lesshighschoolstress.com/engineering/ It's just one place, but I don't see any reason to believe lists for other desirable employers would be any different. |
This student does not sound stupid, it just sounds as though she was new to the world of work and paychecks. She also may have been shy and nervous about making phone calls to ask about her pay and thought that maybe they were just delayed. There’s all kinds of reasons a young person could get into a situation like you describe without being stupid. The description of students described above still sounds like kids who have been prepped for every class and test and just have no idea how to handle a test question that they haven’t previously studied. New material and novel questions are beyond their capabilities. |
I call trolling, or you are not smart enough to recognize those "unqualified students" are actually legacy/athletes/parent's name is on a building/etc. |
The PP didn't say you weren't a faculty member. They said you are a faculty member that doesn't know how universities work. Are you claiming that the admissions office at your university doesn't answer to anyone? They are an autonomous unit that doesn't have to consider institutional priorities? Please name this university. I agree that tenured faculty have no voice in the process, but that is because senior administration, the board of trustees/regents has all the power. |