Anonymous wrote:The only DMV school that does well with MIT admissions is TJ with 10-20 kids admitted every year. I don’t have stats on the Montgomery Blair magnet but I doubt they do as well as TJ
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree it’s good. It was always a rigged system, with agents in China packaging applicants in exchange for big money from parents, and universities turning a blind eye because they loved all the money from full-pay international students. A better solution would be to require applicants to come to the US to take their SATs and sit for an in-person English exam.
A New York Times analysis concluded 90% of Chinese applications include fraudulent elements: https://m.huffpost.com/us/entry/us_1074544?ec_carp=8606710182779242733
I'm sure the colleges who go out of their way to accept these full pay students are "shocked" "shocked" to find there's been cheating going.
Anonymous wrote:Any word on how DMV schools did on MIT Early applications?
Anonymous wrote:I agree it’s good. It was always a rigged system, with agents in China packaging applicants in exchange for big money from parents, and universities turning a blind eye because they loved all the money from full-pay international students. A better solution would be to require applicants to come to the US to take their SATs and sit for an in-person English exam.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree it’s good. It was always a rigged system, with agents in China packaging applicants in exchange for big money from parents, and universities turning a blind eye because they loved all the money from full-pay international students. A better solution would be to require applicants to come to the US to take their SATs and sit for an in-person English exam.
A New York Times analysis concluded 90% of Chinese applications include fraudulent elements: https://m.huffpost.com/us/entry/us_1074544?ec_carp=8606710182779242733
Anonymous wrote:I agree it’s good. It was always a rigged system, with agents in China packaging applicants in exchange for big money from parents, and universities turning a blind eye because they loved all the money from full-pay international students. A better solution would be to require applicants to come to the US to take their SATs and sit for an in-person English exam.