I totally believe this poster, actually. This is what our broken admissions system has become. |
+1 A lot of basic, unhooked Soujth Asian kids at Penn for some reason. i would apply there. |
A senior now is complaining about admissions? It’s not even regular decision season. And the whole trolling about non binary? The only thing missing here is something about CRT to complete the trifecta. |
Or maybe it's a bunch of different posters who genuinely care about other people (gasp!) and are sharing a link to a free website that has lots of data that might help people stop fretting about things that don't matter. The website was written about in an article in the Post last year, so thousands of DC area residents are familiar with it. |
ok mr. website owner |
NP and I believe this is the lens the poster is seeing this situation through, but do you know how many qualified kids of all races are “riding the rejection train” right now? The rest is cynicisim. |
^^^ |
Thank you! OP here. This is useful. We are not looking at HYPSM et al. But it will be nice to at least have the schools you listed as a goal. He works hard and is a good kid. He always appreciates when other peers work hard-be it in athletics or academics or other ECs and it will be nice if he gets his fair round to at least play. |
Pp here, tbf on a percentage basis it is still pretty low as pretty much every unhooked south Asian kid that scores at Atleast the median for penn throws in an application there Indian males love penn |
| Be a unicorn - be unique. No one is impressed by test scores due to massive cheating. Be someone special - don't do something common. |
The two kids from my DC’s class who were accepted by HPY are studying gender, women’s study, and diversity. Both are Asian with Stem ambition and great stats. I dont know what they wrote on their assay but I am sure they are not about math team, robotics, or lab sxperience. |
This sounds like good advice. We went through this last year. South Asian kid, didn't get into any of the top privates, but a lot of girls did. Ended up at a top public. He's happy but it is painful to watch relatively unaccomplished kids go to a top private school that my son could have easily done well in (I'm not talking about URMs here). Getting into top private schools is a game that some unhooked families/groups have perfected. They work on their kids starting in 9th grade, kid will do a side project (e.g. develop an education app), related it to something from his family (e.g. how grandpa had to walk 10 miles to school or how his visit to his village in China "opened his eyes" to lack of education for poor kids, etc.), and how that made the kid develop the app. The app and website itself would have been developed by the kid but highly "polished" by the parents or hired help. Of course, the kid has to have the smarts, scores and compliant enough to play along. I think (3) is very important. During one of our college visits at a top private college, the student tour guide (a middle eastern kid), when asked about how he got into that college talked about how he loved English and showed his passion for English in the application, etc. He also talked about how he worked two jobs his senior year of HS and worked on a political campaign. The impression created was that he came from a family of limited means and was studying English in college. We hung back after the tour to talk to him to get more specific inputs. Come to find out, both his parents were physicians, his older sister was in Harvard med school and advised him a lot on the application process, the two jobs and campaign work was based on "advice" he got (don't recall if that was his sister or a consultant. This was at a time when we were not aware of college admission consultants). The kid was really majoring in CS (from day 1) and had a job lined up with a FAANG company after he completes his junior year! Now extrapolate this to all the White people that have been doing this for decades and you get the picture. Some use SAT/ACT consultants that charge $500+/HOUR, and college consultants that charge tens of thousands. Some even bribe coaches (as we all know) and who knows what other methods are being used by these folks that are yet to come to light. If you are not doing all that, your chances are bleak. Sad thing is, we are all subsidizing these colleges (and therefore these rich families) by not making those schools pay taxes. But that's another story.. Safest thing for South Asian boys, pick any school that's decent in CS (there are lots), use your connections to get an internship during college (that seems to be key with getting a job) and get them a job in a top company. Help as may South Asian boys as you can to go through this process. They can worry about Harvard for their children. |
You think these kids ONLY have test scores? Not sure what you are referring to with "massive cheating".. bribing athletic coaches, maybe? Most of them have excellent extra-curriculars and leadership roles. They don't get off the boat yesterday. |
BS. None of HPY care about what you say you're going to study on your application and 'diversity' isn't a major. And none of them are going to believe that this is what those kids wanted to study if all the other things on their application are math team, robotics and lab work. nice try, troll. |
I don’t disagree that being South Asian (or any kind of Asian) puts a kid at a disadvantage for college admissions. However, I take issue with your last comment. Sounds like you want to find a reason to hate the USA. I hope you have family in India or Pakistan (or whichever country you are from). The culture there is very much about looking our for yourself and screw what happens to ‘others’. The reason Asians are discriminated against here in the US is because Blacks and Latinos have a harder time and the US colleges are trying to adjust for that. |