
In case anyone was under any notion that you knew what you were talking about, you've efficiently blown that possibility out of the water. Well done. |
TJ admissions were and are easy to game. MIT, not so much. |
Well, USAMO gold medalists and Regeneron finalists have a 90% rate of getting accepted to HYM, so these "gaming" parents should just pay Curie $20K to prep their kids to become USAMO/Regeneron winners, right? Sounds as easy-peasy as gaming the TJ admissions. /s |
Your indication of snark is amusing, but ignores the fact that, especially in the case of Regeneron, that bill is usually a lot higher than $20K. |
Please tell me the price tag for ensuring that my DS/DD will be recognized as one of the top 40 young scientists in the country. Folks are willing to pay upwards of $500K just to have a "good" college name on DS/DD's diploma - if the price tag is less than that, I'm sure that there will be plenty of demand for that service. or... please do not denigrate these kid's accomplishments by suggesting that money can buy achievement. |
I saw there was even a new service you can sign up to get DC paired with a professor to get them cred as a named author for a fee, |
Suggesting that it can't or doesn't in today's environment is incredibly naive. Sure, plenty of kids are high achievers without significant financial or parental assistance, and we should laud those accomplishments - but their existence doesn't preempt the importance of removing systemic incentivization for parents to leverage their resources to get ahead of those without the same resources. And for the record, yes, I think legacy admissions are highly problematic too. Most progressives do. |
I think the suggestion is the parents help with some of these science fairs, sometimes using company resources. JFK's college thesis Why England Slept, and Profiles In Courage both had that type of assistance. |
1) It's not a suggestion - they absolutely do if they feel it will help their kid win; 2) If the TJ Admissions process incentivizes parents to do whatever it takes to help their kid win, those who are sufficiently motivated and without scruples will spare no expense to make sure it happens. This is why it's highly problematic to reference performance in certain competitions as indicative of "merit". It's entirely possible the kid did the work themselves, and it's also very possible that they didn't. |
The contests are proctored by officials with the state or chapter or national groups. |
For AMC/AIME/USAMO, the competitions are proctored, and the kids have to do the work themselves. |
Let’s remove the kids from the parents altogether then. This way these kids won’t have any advantage whatsoever. |
I think what PP wants to do is disregard any accomplishments that could possibly have been aided by someone else. So Olympic athletes who have good coaches should be disqualified. And the Nobel prize should not be given to children of former Nobel prize winners, because of the "incentives" structure that may lead unscrupulous Nobel prize winners to "make sure" their kids succeed. |
I think what the PP wants to do is to treat TJ like an educational institution, not a competition or a prize. |
I imagine that the PP wants to treat TJ like a governor's school intended to meet the needs of kids who are beyond the level of their same age peers and not as a feel good social experiment. |