The OP said the SAT score is considered in the context of your schools’ scores. Is that on the score report? I don’t think I’ve seen that. My kid goes to a test in magnet so it seems somewhat unfair. |
Dartmouth said it’s like a calculator now. The pretty much expect most everyone is now. The screening isn’t accurate either—lots of false positives. How about them apples? Your kid spends 6 months perfecting his essay and it gets erroneously dinged. |
And even if colleges prohibit essays whose provenance is generative AI, nabbing a student for robotic plagiarism is an imprecise science. The company behind ChatGPT shut down its own tool for detecting text generated by AI in July, citing a high rate of human-derived text that the application flagged as written by AI. One scholar in a Wired article noted that even a 1% rate of false-positives is inexcusable, because for every 1,000 essays, that’s 10 students who could be accused of an academic theft they didn’t commit. JR Gonzalez, chief technology officer for the Los Angeles County Office of Education, noted that no AI detection tool is 100% accurate. And AI itself can occasionally produce wrong information. |
^^Well, many on here are paying THOUSANDS of dollars to basically have someone else write their kids’ essays. Where is the detector for that? |
My understanding is that at least Dartmouth and Yale (and probably other highly selective schools) use AI to sort applicants into different piles--e.g., Pile #1 (exceptionally strong), Pile #2 (strong), and Pile #3 (unlikely to admit). Apparently, this helps them get through the applications faster. They claim that they still read entire applications in each pile, so that a student with a lower GPA in Pile #3 might get bumped into the admit pile if there's an adequate explanation of past performance or something exceptional in another part of the application. Still, I get the sense that AOs spend much less time with the Pile #3 applications than the other piles. My loose understanding is that such pile sorting is based on each school's own (unpublished) calculus of mostly quantifiable metrics like GPA, class rigor, and test scores. |
The average SAT scores are usually included on the school profile. I know Blair magnet includes the scores on the profile, which is separate from the general profile for the non-magnet students. |
This is concerning because it allows the schools to potentially push one kid over the other. |
So everyone is simply taking an anonymous poster's word for all of this? No proof, evidence, citations? How incredibly stupid. |
I suspect (have no proof) that the counselor letters provide all of the behind the scenes data, even for privates that don’t list a GPA or class rank. How else can colleges know who has the highest rigor, etc? Our school profile provides very little useful information. It has to come from somewhere! |
This often happens at private schools, especially during ED. |
Mixed race could be anything…not black/white |
Of course it comes from that letter! It’s not innocuous. Even if there is no ranking, they have to check whether or not the student is “one of the most exceptional they’ve ever seen in the school” or ranks somewhere else. There also our quartiles for them to check, even if no ranking exists. |
This sounds like Potomac. |
Actually, they don’t. A good coach makes suggestions and helps the candidate to review their options about what to write on. They don’t write the essays. Their time is too valuable for that |
All of the info you describe is in the profile sent by the high school to the college. It takes all of a few seconds for a reader to figure how estimated rank and how rigorous the academic load |