Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:op--there's a lot of subjectivity in college admissions. that's a hard fact for many to swallow. but if everything were based on something more objective, like test scores, people would be equally unhappy with that...
There is not an army of admissions officers looking over 150,000 applications subjectively scoring them on just their own individual desires. The UCs are feeding the apps into an enrollment management system and hiring 3rd party consultants to build the class they want. This means that there is clear objective criteria in addition to gpa. UCs are test blind and say they don’t consider AP scores yet they have you self report them. UCs also are always bragging that they’ve increased URM, Latino, first gen and low income students. That’s great but to achieve this they have to be assigning additional points to a proxy measure.
If the value of your house, zip code, your parents level of education and proxy measures for your race change your odds of acceptance from 20% to 2% that is valuable information in deciding college planning.
We dodged a bullet as DH is UC all the way, multiple legacies, PhDs, doctors etc all from UCB, UCLA and a dark horse who went to UCI. He did not want to save for private but I wasn’t willing to drink the Kool Aid. DS is top stats and going to an excellent top 10 SLAC which he will enjoy and benefit from far more than any of the UCs. He was shut out of the UCs despite a perfect GPA, most rigorous courses, great ECs and great essay. It’s really shocking in our school district who got in and who didn’t. It certainly wasn’t the top students. There are a lot of kids whose parents banked on in state. If they knew they only had a 2% chance of a top UC or a 5% chance of a mid UC that brags about a 40% acceptance rate, they would have planned differently.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:op--there's a lot of subjectivity in college admissions. that's a hard fact for many to swallow. but if everything were based on something more objective, like test scores, people would be equally unhappy with that...
There is not an army of admissions officers looking over 150,000 applications subjectively scoring them on just their own individual desires. The UCs are feeding the apps into an enrollment management system and hiring 3rd party consultants to build the class they want. This means that there is clear objective criteria in addition to gpa. UCs are test blind and say they don’t consider AP scores yet they have you self report them. UCs also are always bragging that they’ve increased URM, Latino, first gen and low income students. That’s great but to achieve this they have to be assigning additional points to a proxy measure.
If the value of your house, zip code, your parents level of education and proxy measures for your race change your odds of acceptance from 20% to 2% that is valuable information in deciding college planning.
We dodged a bullet as DH is UC all the way, multiple legacies, PhDs, doctors etc all from UCB, UCLA and a dark horse who went to UCI. He did not want to save for private but I wasn’t willing to drink the Kool Aid. DS is top stats and going to an excellent top 10 SLAC which he will enjoy and benefit from far more than any of the UCs. He was shut out of the UCs despite a perfect GPA, most rigorous courses, great ECs and great essay. It’s really shocking in our school district who got in and who didn’t. It certainly wasn’t the top students. There are a lot of kids whose parents banked on in state. If they knew they only had a 2% chance of a top UC or a 5% chance of a mid UC that brags about a 40% acceptance rate, they would have planned differently.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:op--there's a lot of subjectivity in college admissions. that's a hard fact for many to swallow. but if everything were based on something more objective, like test scores, people would be equally unhappy with that...
Why would people be unhappy with more objecrive measures??
Anonymous wrote:op--there's a lot of subjectivity in college admissions. that's a hard fact for many to swallow. but if everything were based on something more objective, like test scores, people would be equally unhappy with that...
Anonymous wrote:The entire UC problem could be fixed if students are only allowed to apply to the ONE school they really want. When they changed the system to allow multiple applications to all the UC’s from every student everything went crazy and it became much much harder for admissions to find the students who really want to go there and will accept an offer. I think the change was made back in the early 80’s and it needs to go back to that.
Anonymous wrote:op--there's a lot of subjectivity in college admissions. that's a hard fact for many to swallow. but if everything were based on something more objective, like test scores, people would be equally unhappy with that...
Anonymous wrote:We are in CA. I’m really struck by how little the UC and Cal States reveal about how they score applicants and how little the high school counselors know. One of our kids did far better than Naviance predicted for in state and one did far worse for instate. Privates tracked pretty close to the acceptance rate by GPA, EC, SAT but the CA in states did not. High school counselors just chuckle and say UC and top Cal States are a crapshoot and unpredictable but this is far from reality. They just don’t have the information to be predictive.
CA public high schools code their courses. If they’ve coded them correctly, which isn’t always the case, a course may count as a lab science and lab science is awarded more rigor points. If you take four years of Project Lead the Way you end up with 8 extra semesters of lab science and rigor points than any other elective series including languages. In our school district and the next school district over Project Lead the Way courses are coded as honors so there is an extra bump but at our school it isn’t coded that way even though the courses over here have more rigor. None of this is shared with students. Cal States and to a lesser degree UCs give a bump for proximity. Cal States give a huge bump for proximity.
The individual UCs give different points for URM, 1st gen, rural, low income, and non traditional UCB reserves half its transfer spots for applicants in one of those categories. 1st gen is defined by the individual university and not shared and no information on % that is reserved for incoming students.
I believe that universities should admit who they want and I’m not even opposed to quotas. I do think though that kids should know their actual chances and be able to preschool their applications with the point factors that they can’t control. Holistic isn’t magic, they have weighting points fed into an enrollment management system, they build a class by outsourcing readers and scorers with clear guidance on assigning points. At least for public institutions that information should be shared with the public. It isn’t a trade secret.
Anonymous wrote:We are in CA. I’m really struck by how little the UC and Cal States reveal about how they score applicants and how little the high school counselors know. One of our kids did far better than Naviance predicted for in state and one did far worse for instate. Privates tracked pretty close to the acceptance rate by GPA, EC, SAT but the CA in states did not. High school counselors just chuckle and say UC and top Cal States are a crapshoot and unpredictable but this is far from reality. They just don’t have the information to be predictive.
CA public high schools code their courses. If they’ve coded them correctly, which isn’t always the case, a course may count as a lab science and lab science is awarded more rigor points. If you take four years of Project Lead the Way you end up with 8 extra semesters of lab science and rigor points than any other elective series including languages. In our school district and the next school district over Project Lead the Way courses are coded as honors so there is an extra bump but at our school it isn’t coded that way even though the courses over here have more rigor. None of this is shared with students. Cal States and to a lesser degree UCs give a bump for proximity. Cal States give a huge bump for proximity.
The individual UCs give different points for URM, 1st gen, rural, low income, and non traditional UCB reserves half its transfer spots for applicants in one of those categories. 1st gen is defined by the individual university and not shared and no information on % that is reserved for incoming students.
I believe that universities should admit who they want and I’m not even opposed to quotas. I do think though that kids should know their actual chances and be able to preschool their applications with the point factors that they can’t control. Holistic isn’t magic, they have weighting points fed into an enrollment management system, they build a class by outsourcing readers and scorers with clear guidance on assigning points. At least for public institutions that information should be shared with the public. It isn’t a trade secret.
Anonymous wrote:We are in CA. I’m really struck by how little the UC and Cal States reveal about how they score applicants and how little the high school counselors know. One of our kids did far better than Naviance predicted for in state and one did far worse for instate. Privates tracked pretty close to the acceptance rate by GPA, EC, SAT but the CA in states did not. High school counselors just chuckle and say UC and top Cal States are a crapshoot and unpredictable but this is far from reality. They just don’t have the information to be predictive.
CA public high schools code their courses. If they’ve coded them correctly, which isn’t always the case, a course may count as a lab science and lab science is awarded more rigor points. If you take four years of Project Lead the Way you end up with 8 extra semesters of lab science and rigor points than any other elective series including languages. In our school district and the next school district over Project Lead the Way courses are coded as honors so there is an extra bump but at our school it isn’t coded that way even though the courses over here have more rigor. None of this is shared with students. Cal States and to a lesser degree UCs give a bump for proximity. Cal States give a huge bump for proximity.
The individual UCs give different points for URM, 1st gen, rural, low income, and non traditional UCB reserves half its transfer spots for applicants in one of those categories. 1st gen is defined by the individual university and not shared and no information on % that is reserved for incoming students.
I believe that universities should admit who they want and I’m not even opposed to quotas. I do think though that kids should know their actual chances and be able to preschool their applications with the point factors that they can’t control. Holistic isn’t magic, they have weighting points fed into an enrollment management system, they build a class by outsourcing readers and scorers with clear guidance on assigning points. At least for public institutions that information should be shared with the public. It isn’t a trade secret.