There are plenty of choices for high stats kids. Just not the schools with acceptance rates below 10%. Expectations need to be tempered there. |
| Normal or average? |
CCO office said they are seeing colleges accept lower stats kids and defer/reject higher stats kids in the current cycle - they said it left my kid a little exposed and to be concerned. I would be happy to be wrong, but CCO said to worry so I am. |
| Anonymous board = parents fantasizing about their kids' stats. |
Right except they chose to major in education because it was one of the easiest major not because of any burning desire to teach and make minimum wages. Also, most went to third rate colleges and lack substantive subject matter knowledge except for few. |
I thought they became teachers because they like getting paid 12 months for working 9 months. |
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I teach at a T14 law school. Our law students come from colleges that are all over the rankings, from HYP to obscure schools I've never heard of. I can tell you from 25 years of teaching at elite law schools that there is zero correlation between success in law school and ranking of undergrad institution. And they will all be T14 law school grads....
It's like the old joke: Q: what do you call the person who's last in their class at medical school? A: Doctor. The normal kids will be fine. |
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How fun! A law professor who doesn't know the first thing about statistics.
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That's par for the course. |
How fun! DCUM posters who just post nasty responses instead of asking questions! Law prof here. This is not just my own anecdotal info. We did internal studies to see if there were correlations, and there were not. |
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You did an analysis of internal data, meaning these were all kids who had managed to get admitted to a T14. You know as well as anybody that the vast majority of the students at your T14 come from about 25 very selective undergraduate schools. The minority of students who came from UMBC and Cal State Northridge are not at all representative of all graduates from those schools. All that your analysis tells you is that once a student has surmounted some really high barriers, the undergraduate college selectivity is less of a factor in their success in a T14 law school.
Please tell me that you understand that you cannot draw the conclusion from such an analysis that the average student at UMBC or Cal State Northridge has the same chance of succeeding at a T14 law school as the average Columbia University graduate. |
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You are incorrect in your assumptions, PP. 20 years ago, we did indeed get the majority of our entering JD classes from 25 or or so feeder schools. That is no longer the case by any stretch. I have served several times on our admissions committee in recent years, and I am very familiar with the profile of our entering classes. Your assumptions are out of date. We do not admit average kids from either the top 25 schools OR obscure schools, because we have learned that the best predictor of law school grades is being in the top 25% of the student’s college class. Kids from the top 25th% at obscure colleges outperform kids from the 50th percentile at elite colleges, in our experience. The kids who do well at their college, whatever their college was, do well in law school. whether this is true at other T 14 schools, I have no idea, but speaking for ours, a kid who does well at any school in the country and as well on the LSAT had as good a chance of admission as a kid from a top 25 school.
And here’s the thing: USNews does not care which colleges our students come from; They care only about the GPA and test scores of entering students. We have absolutely no incentive to take low stats kids from fancier schools over high stats kids from obscure schools. |
I don't think so either. I know too many people in real life whose kids are just doing that well. They really are. I am shocked by the norm in getting an SAT score of 1300/1400/1500 these days. Back in the 80s it wasn't quite as normal even in my small private school with lots of high achieving students who went on to selective schools. |
She said “a year”, but go in trying to feel so superior. |
| Mine is normal and we are not pushing him. We want high school to be challenging but manageable and not overwhelming. He is a sophomore and taking ONE AP, ONE Honors class and the rest are regular classes. He will likely do the same next year and senior year. He plays sports and has a job and is enjoying his high school years without stressing about getting into a top university, doing too many extra activities to try and impress admissions counselors, etc. I know he will find the perfect school for HIM- we already did this and now it is his journey and we are here to support him. |