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Reply to "I feel bad for low-income/first-gen students at elite schools"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]There was a senior survey at Princeton which had a breakdown for GPA across income levels, first-gen status, etc: https://projects.dailyprincetonian.com/senior-survey-2022/academics.html 50% of first-gen students had a 3.6 GPA or higher, compared to 69% of non-first gen students. The lowest income students by family household (below 40K) at Princeton had an average GPA of a 3.5, while the highest income students had a 3.72. 32% of the lowest income students reported cheating on an assignment or exam, compared to 21% of students overall. Only 49% of students on financial aid reported having a job lined up for graduation, compared to 62% of those not on FA. Expected income for those on FA was 84K one year after graduating, compared to 124K for those not on FA. Students on all household income levels below 125K reported expected earnings under 84K, while all those over that level reported at least 115K. These are considerable gaps. If higher ed is supposed to be the great equalizer, why are Princeton grads seeing such discrepancies corresponding with their background? [/quote] These "discrepancies" demonstrate what should be extremely obvious to everyone, which is that the "elite" schools are admitting low-income / first-gen students who are not academically qualified, and are doing so for ideological reasons.[/quote] You're comment is not the takeaway I see from OP's post "The lowest income students by family household (below 40K) at Princeton had an average GPA of a 3.5, while the highest income students had a 3.72." Oh, a 3.5 GPA from Stanford is so bad? How dare Stanford risk sullying their academic reputation by allowing in such riff raff :roll: [/quote] +1 I don't understand how one draws that conclusion when the lowest income students are doing pretty damn well. Imagine if they didn't have to worry about work study, family obligations, and such like their higher household income peers. [/quote] The post isn’t a sincere look at how lower-income students are doing. It’s just an effort to promote stupid class warfare. Even getting a 2.1 GPA from a school like Princeton or Yale is fine. And one of the goals of holistic admissions is to bring in some students who will be fine with being the students who get the C’s, in exchange for getting a good education and a valuable degree. So, any students who get C’s but are pleasant, have a good time and go in to have what they think of as a good life are success stories, from the perspective of a highly selective school. [/quote]
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