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College and University Discussion
Reply to "Not all high school good grades are equal at selective universities"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]This was my college roommate. Had straight A's from tiny town hihg school in PA. I thought he'd kick my butt, me being a B-average student from a "W" school in MoCo. We were both in engineering so not easy stuff. His grades the first yet? All F's except for 1 D. He transferred out right after. I guess in his HS, just showing up gets you a B, and turning in your assignment on time gets you an A.[/quote] This is least intelligent post I have read in a while, which says a lot since I read the 2nd wives thread.[/quote] Nah, that one was OK. The one about "manipulating AP tests" was dumb, as was the one about getting someone else to take the SAT for you. For a year or so now, the College Board has required that you upload your photo when you register, and that you show ID on the day of the test. I don't think you can change your registration photo. So if your plan was to get different people to take your various AP and SAT subject tests for you, you're SOL. I agree that it's widely known that colleges' regional reps understand the relative rigor at different high schools within their assigned regions. Also that many colleges reweight your transcript according to their own, proprietary formulas.[/quote] You can manipulate your GPA with AP classes especially if your tiger mom does your projects and you have top notch tutors.[/quote] OK, you really don't understand how this works, do you? I nominate your "get your tiger mom to do your AP projects for you" as the least intelligent post today. AP classes are nothing like the middle school science fair, unless your tiger mom also happens to be an NIH chemist or a university history prof. For the record, most selective universities start with your UNweighted GPA, i.e., they give your A in AP World History a 4 not a 5. Then they reweight it using their own system. They may well give more weight to an AP class--but that's because AP classes are harder than regular or honors classes. High school honors classes are pretty easy, frankly. AP classes are supposed to be college-level classes, so the kid is working harder. Don't you think more work might deserve a higher weight? The tutor thing is an advantage that rich kids have over poor kids. Yes, rich kids can buy extra help. But at the end of the day, kids in AP classes still have to master more material than kids in regular or honors classes. [/quote] Okay, so you don't know how it works. My sister teaches in a high school and all the parents do their kids outside research. Most their tiger moms have advanced degrees. You are delusional if you think these kids do original research and hand in projects done without professional help. Her principal has flipped 1/2 the projects to in school projects with lectures being viewed at home because it is impossible to get moms and dads out of the mix. I don't care if they weight AP classes with a silver spoon but the fact is people are playing the system. Even though selective school redo GPAs, less selective do not. Also, more selective schools look at how rigorous the schedule is and when your mom and a tutor do some of your homework for you and edit/rewrite all you research papers it is much easier to take a rigorous schedule. In the end no matter how much an AP student has to master vs another student ... They are missing out mastering things like resilience, independence and emotional intelligence other kids are mastering without their parents doing their work for them.[/quote] Is there any evidence that suggests that kids in AP classes are more likely to have parents doing their work for them? The article indicates colleges are giving greater weight to the AP [i]exam[/i], not the AP grade, which should set your mind at ease. If Johnny's mom is doing all the work for him, so he gets an A in the class, it will be easy for colleges to see that something is amiss when he gets a 2 on the exam. While the kid who is soldiering through alone will actually be learning something and should perform better on the exam.[/quote] They do talk about how wealth and tutors gives an advantage on test taking. They also state... [i]But in an era of helicopter parenting, colleges increasingly worry that these essays aren't written by the student. To combat the possibility that parents, siblings or school counselors may be ghostwriting essays...[/i] [/quote]
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