Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gee, maybe the students at Harvard, Yale, Brown, Amherst, Pomona, and Stanford are smart.
The median GPA for these schools has gone from a 3.5 in 2016 to above a 3.7 in 2026.
You really think the newer entering classes got that much more academically qualified? Coupled with the dumbing down of AP exams, SAT/ACT, test optional policies, and COVID disruption making it harder for schools to distinguish top candidates?
A few top schools make their grads work for the A. Cornell is one of them. The ones above give out A-s as a participatory grade, and Bs and below are rare (Cs almost unheard of).
What a bunch of BS. Cornell has a high average gpa outside of engineering. College of Arts and Science is around 3.7-3.8 average. Seems like a booster.
Did you ignore the objective data above? Cornell has a noticeably lower GPA than its peer schools. You will see the same trend for all academic reports at different sports.
https://www.cornellsun.com/article/2026/01/in-data-panhel-members-outperform-cornell-average-gpa-among-other-greek-life-groups
3.44 overall
https://www.thecrimson.com/article/2025/10/27/grading-workload-report/
3.83 for Harvard grads
Anonymous wrote:Grade inflation is rampant at most top schools. Harvard, Yale, Brown, Amherst, Pomona, and Stanford are especially notorious. Johns Hopkins just hit a 3.8 median gpa for all undergrads. Caltech has one of the highest D3 average GPAs at almost a 4.
Just take a look at all American team GPAs and you’ll see how high top schools get: https://cscaa.org/spring-team-scholar-all-america-released/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gee, maybe the students at Harvard, Yale, Brown, Amherst, Pomona, and Stanford are smart.
The median GPA for these schools has gone from a 3.5 in 2016 to above a 3.7 in 2026.
You really think the newer entering classes got that much more academically qualified? Coupled with the dumbing down of AP exams, SAT/ACT, test optional policies, and COVID disruption making it harder for schools to distinguish top candidates?
A few top schools make their grads work for the A. Cornell is one of them. The ones above give out A-s as a participatory grade, and Bs and below are rare (Cs almost unheard of).
What a bunch of BS. Cornell has a high average gpa outside of engineering. College of Arts and Science is around 3.7-3.8 average. Seems like a booster.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gee, maybe the students at Harvard, Yale, Brown, Amherst, Pomona, and Stanford are smart.
The median GPA for these schools has gone from a 3.5 in 2016 to above a 3.7 in 2026.
You really think the newer entering classes got that much more academically qualified? Coupled with the dumbing down of AP exams, SAT/ACT, test optional policies, and COVID disruption making it harder for schools to distinguish top candidates?
A few top schools make their grads work for the A. Cornell is one of them. The ones above give out A-s as a participatory grade, and Bs and below are rare (Cs almost unheard of).
Anonymous wrote:LOL---it's an opinion piece, and you missed the point of it entirely.
Anonymous wrote:Gee, maybe the students at Harvard, Yale, Brown, Amherst, Pomona, and Stanford are smart.
Anonymous wrote:That is not what the article says. Did you read it?
Anonymous wrote:Recent student article illuminates how easy the school truly is. Maybe parents should worry about the lack of rigor at this “elite” institution: https://bowdoinorient.com/2026/04/10/bowdoin-is-easy/
Anonymous wrote:That is not what the article says. Did you read it?