Anonymous wrote:I think the T50s will go back-it may lessen the crush of apps they were receiving
I think schools outside of that will stay TO
Anonymous wrote:I think the T50s will go back-it may lessen the crush of apps they were receiving
I think schools outside of that will stay TO
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:TO is on the way out.
It was a band-aid to get through Covid. The DEI crowd wants to keep it, because “equity.”
The DEI crowd really does not want to admit what a failure TO really is.
Define "failure."
For the elite schools, are graduation rates compromised?
Are parents on DCUM really concerned about a 3.4 versus a 3.3 undergrad GPA? After all, after their kid is accepted to a college, who cares?
Anonymous wrote:TO is on the way out.
It was a band-aid to get through Covid. The DEI crowd wants to keep it, because “equity.”
The DEI crowd really does not want to admit what a failure TO really is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:TO is on the way out.
It was a band-aid to get through Covid. The DEI crowd wants to keep it, because “equity.”
The DEI crowd really does not want to admit what a failure TO really is.
Define "failure."
For the elite schools, are graduation rates compromised?
Are parents on DCUM really concerned about a 3.4 versus a 3.3 undergrad GPA? After all, after their kid is accepted to a college, who cares?
Anonymous wrote:TO is on the way out.
It was a band-aid to get through Covid. The DEI crowd wants to keep it, because “equity.”
The DEI crowd really does not want to admit what a failure TO really is.
Anonymous wrote:TO is on the way out.
It was a band-aid to get through Covid. The DEI crowd wants to keep it, because “equity.”
The DEI crowd really does not want to admit what a failure TO really is.
Anonymous wrote:https://nymag.com/intelligencer/article/what-does-an-sat-score-mean-in-a-test-optional-world.html
It's a pretty good article that lays out how we got to TO and where it is going. Prominently featured is MIT and their decision to go back to requiring tests while it also talks about schools that will remain TO for the time being and their reasons why.
Anonymous wrote:https://nymag.com/intelligencer/article/what-does-an-sat-score-mean-in-a-test-optional-world.html
It's a pretty good article that lays out how we got to TO and where it is going. Prominently featured is MIT and their decision to go back to requiring tests while it also talks about schools that will remain TO for the time being and their reasons why.