Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The SAT is highly correlated to household income.
The majority of MIT students come from high income households.
Not surprised.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FO9NAQFXsAkMWK3?format=jpg&name=large
Well, kind of. It’s actually correlated to parental education which tends to be correlated with SES.
Not always the case. Parent (NMF) admitted to MIT from a working class family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The SAT is highly correlated to household income.
The majority of MIT students come from high income households.
Not surprised.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FO9NAQFXsAkMWK3?format=jpg&name=large
Well, kind of. It’s actually correlated to parental education which tends to be correlated with SES.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The SAT is highly correlated to household income.
The majority of MIT students come from high income households.
Not surprised.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FO9NAQFXsAkMWK3?format=jpg&name=large
Well, kind of. It’s actually correlated to parental education which tends to be correlated with SES.
Well, AP scores, GPA in hard classes (not talking about grade inflation), they all correlate to parental education, too.
Should we do away with GPA and AP classes/exams, too?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:WTF? Do you have any data that supports this ridiculous statement? Have you ever been to MIT? Do you know anything about non STEM majors there? Are you aware that Winston Churchill spoke at the school and said science must also be complimented with strong humanities? I hate MF's who don't know what they're talking about.Not all majors are STEM even at MIT. There are easy majors too for URMs, Legacies, First Gen, atheletes, etc.
WTF so you think American Studies, Anthropology, African Studies, Asian Studies, History, Literature, Gender Studies, Political Science, Philosophy, Theater Art etc. majors are as hard as Electrical Engineering, Computer Science, Physics at MIT? GTFOOH
Still…
P1: What did you study at MIT?
p2: History
P1: confused. Why did you go to MIT?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:WTF? Do you have any data that supports this ridiculous statement? Have you ever been to MIT? Do you know anything about non STEM majors there? Are you aware that Winston Churchill spoke at the school and said science must also be complimented with strong humanities? I hate MF's who don't know what they're talking about.Not all majors are STEM even at MIT. There are easy majors too for URMs, Legacies, First Gen, atheletes, etc.
WTF so you think American Studies, Anthropology, African Studies, Asian Studies, History, Literature, Gender Studies, Political Science, Philosophy, Theater Art etc. majors are as hard as Electrical Engineering, Computer Science, Physics at MIT? GTFOOH
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The link didn't work for me but this one does:https://mitadmissions.org/blogs/entry/we-are-reinstating-our-sat-act-requirement-for-future-admissions-cycles/Yes, it makes hiring so much easier. We have to thoroughly test applicants ourselves from more racist, cultural fit type colleges in IT as they have just been good at taking nine classes and dropping all but the gut classes. The objective result also helps us find often overlooked, underrepresented candidates from poorer more disadvantaged areas who put the work in individually. A wonderful reprieve after having to deal with an enormous ego and corresponding finger-pointing to deal with the "shock" of how weak they really are in spite of their genitalia/skin/daddy/delusion. MIT using data-driven correlation for more fair entry is awesome!Anonymous wrote:good
I can definitely believe that MIT found that requiring the SAT helped better select high school students who will do well at MIT.
But for companies hiring MIT graduates, wouldn't grades and internships and research tell you way more about the applicant than a single test taken in high school? That is, even if the admissions office picked some students who won't do well in college, can't employees tell who didn't do well in college?
By and large, if you major in STEM (and why else would one attend MIT), you will need extremely strong math skills. A 700 on the SAT Math section student is likely to struggle at MIT (not all would, but majority would). What I don't get is why MIT would be a school a student would apply to if they were not exceptionally strong in MATH?
Not all majors are STEM even at MIT.
There are easy majors too for URMs, Legacies, First Gen, atheletes, etc.
Anonymous wrote:So, the SAT/ACT is back, but it’s still a lottery to get in. You could fill 1,337 seats in the DMV alone of students with high test scores.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The SAT is highly correlated to household income.
The majority of MIT students come from high income households.
Not surprised.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FO9NAQFXsAkMWK3?format=jpg&name=large
I'll guess other things that are correlated with household income:
- Grades
- Course rigor
- Quality of essays
- Existing high school relationship with a college
- Performance in regional and national competitions
- Extracurriculars
- Athletic performance
- Alumni connections
- High powered recommendations
The only thing I can see not correlated with income is having a story about overcoming hard life circumstances to succeed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The SAT is highly correlated to household income.
The majority of MIT students come from high income households.
Not surprised.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FO9NAQFXsAkMWK3?format=jpg&name=large
Well, kind of. It’s actually correlated to parental education which tends to be correlated with SES.
Well, AP scores, GPA in hard classes (not talking about grade inflation), they all correlate to parental education, too.
Should we do away with GPA and AP classes/exams, too?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The SAT is highly correlated to household income.
The majority of MIT students come from high income households.
Not surprised.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FO9NAQFXsAkMWK3?format=jpg&name=large
Well, kind of. It’s actually correlated to parental education which tends to be correlated with SES.
Anonymous wrote:The SAT is highly correlated to household income.
The majority of MIT students come from high income households.
Not surprised.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FO9NAQFXsAkMWK3?format=jpg&name=large
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:See Harvard.
Test optional will be much more prevalent.
Nope. Test optional will begin to disappear.
It was a trend that was never going to catch on for the masses.
Harvard and pretty much the entire California public college system disagrees.
One highly rejective college reverting back to a standardized test. Not exactly earth shattering news.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:See Harvard.
Test optional will be much more prevalent.
Nope. Test optional will begin to disappear.
It was a trend that was never going to catch on for the masses.
Harvard and pretty much the entire California public college system disagrees.
One highly rejective college reverting back to a standardized test. Not exactly earth shattering news.