Anonymous wrote:https://www.princeton.edu/news/2023/09/06/class-2027-arrives-midst-four-year-undergraduate-expansion
2/3 are receiving financial aid (70k on average)
Almost a quarter are Pell Grant recipients (basically poverty line)
It’s nice that Princeton is spending its insane endowment on poor kids who no doubt have a lot of potential but I struggle to believe the school really represents the best of the best still. When you factor in athletes who tend to receive less aid, what percentage is left for extremely bright upper middle class kids who represented the majority of the school a generation ago? 15 percent?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hopkins too.
They are going to move down the ranks in future years, just like what is happening at Thomas Jefferson HS.
Hardly, their entering class stats keep increasing while pell grant recipients increase.
Well, their GPAs keep increasing but that is grade inflation. In a few years the average GPA in America will be a 5.0.
Most of these kids aren't submitting test scores.
Anonymous wrote:https://www.princeton.edu/news/2023/09/06/class-2027-arrives-midst-four-year-undergraduate-expansion
2/3 are receiving financial aid (70k on average)
Almost a quarter are Pell Grant recipients (basically poverty line)
It’s nice that Princeton is spending its insane endowment on poor kids who no doubt have a lot of potential but I struggle to believe the school really represents the best of the best still. When you factor in athletes who tend to receive less aid, what percentage is left for extremely bright upper middle class kids who represented the majority of the school a generation ago? 15 percent?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hopkins too.
They are going to move down the ranks in future years, just like what is happening at Thomas Jefferson HS.
Hardly, their entering class stats keep increasing while pell grant recipients increase.
Well, their GPAs keep increasing but that is grade inflation. In a few years the average GPA in America will be a 5.0.
Most of these kids aren't submitting test scores.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hopkins too.
They are going to move down the ranks in future years, just like what is happening at Thomas Jefferson HS.
Hardly, their entering class stats keep increasing while pell grant recipients increase.
Anonymous wrote:I mean that means 33% of the student body is still paying over $80,000 a year. I’d say in my friend group only 20% of families could afford to send their kids to a Princeton priced school full pay and everyone went to college/most to grad school.
Anonymous wrote:Hopkins too.
They are going to move down the ranks in future years, just like what is happening at Thomas Jefferson HS.
Anonymous wrote:https://www.princeton.edu/news/2023/09/06/class-2027-arrives-midst-four-year-undergraduate-expansion
2/3 are receiving financial aid (70k on average)
Almost a quarter are Pell Grant recipients (basically poverty line)
It’s nice that Princeton is spending its insane endowment on poor kids who no doubt have a lot of potential but I struggle to believe the school really represents the best of the best still. When you factor in athletes who tend to receive less aid, what percentage is left for extremely bright upper middle class kids who represented the majority of the school a generation ago? 15 percent?