Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have t read the whole thread but ultimately I feel it comes down to score inflation, especially compared to when we were applying to colleges 20-30 years ago. I had friends below 1000 on the SAT who went to college and were very successful. Even Ivies would take ordinary people with a 1200. I had a 1350 and people thought I was a genius.
Now the tests are much easier to get a high score. My kid got a 1540 with just one practice test taken, no prep. Kids now are taking so many standardized tests and prepped for them from ES through HS that many of them know how to do very well.
When they do very well, they think the sky’s the limit and their parents think so too. There just aren’t enough spots for all the kids who can crush the SAT.
1540 is an excellent score. Only around 9000 students out of 2 million sat test takers get 1540+
The student in question got 1590 and only around 1400 students out of 2 million get a 1590+
Bit even so, a large number of that 1400 is going to get rejected form Harvard as are most of the 9000 that managed a 1540.
Most of the 1590 will get rejected. A school like princeton less than 2000 spots per year and they need to attract students interested in all the different departments, majors, teams, groups, activities, etc. A 1590 is only one piece of the puzzle.
Anonymous wrote:He applied to schools with single-digit acceptance rates. Those schools have thousands of flawless applications.
No one is owed an acceptance in a competitive admissions process.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have t read the whole thread but ultimately I feel it comes down to score inflation, especially compared to when we were applying to colleges 20-30 years ago. I had friends below 1000 on the SAT who went to college and were very successful. Even Ivies would take ordinary people with a 1200. I had a 1350 and people thought I was a genius.
Now the tests are much easier to get a high score. My kid got a 1540 with just one practice test taken, no prep. Kids now are taking so many standardized tests and prepped for them from ES through HS that many of them know how to do very well.
When they do very well, they think the sky’s the limit and their parents think so too. There just aren’t enough spots for all the kids who can crush the SAT.
1540 is an excellent score. Only around 9000 students out of 2 million sat test takers get 1540+
The student in question got 1590 and only around 1400 students out of 2 million get a 1590+
Bit even so, a large number of that 1400 is going to get rejected form Harvard as are most of the 9000 that managed a 1540.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have t read the whole thread but ultimately I feel it comes down to score inflation, especially compared to when we were applying to colleges 20-30 years ago. I had friends below 1000 on the SAT who went to college and were very successful. Even Ivies would take ordinary people with a 1200. I had a 1350 and people thought I was a genius.
Now the tests are much easier to get a high score. My kid got a 1540 with just one practice test taken, no prep. Kids now are taking so many standardized tests and prepped for them from ES through HS that many of them know how to do very well.
When they do very well, they think the sky’s the limit and their parents think so too. There just aren’t enough spots for all the kids who can crush the SAT.
1540 is an excellent score. Only around 9000 students out of 2 million sat test takers get 1540+
The student in question got 1590 and only around 1400 students out of 2 million get a 1590+
Anonymous wrote:I have t read the whole thread but ultimately I feel it comes down to score inflation, especially compared to when we were applying to colleges 20-30 years ago. I had friends below 1000 on the SAT who went to college and were very successful. Even Ivies would take ordinary people with a 1200. I had a 1350 and people thought I was a genius.
Now the tests are much easier to get a high score. My kid got a 1540 with just one practice test taken, no prep. Kids now are taking so many standardized tests and prepped for them from ES through HS that many of them know how to do very well.
When they do very well, they think the sky’s the limit and their parents think so too. There just aren’t enough spots for all the kids who can crush the SAT.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the real question should be why are so many people so completely, irrationally OBSESSED with HYP? It’s insane.
Agree. 💯 There are plenty of other good schools and this kid should have applied to a few. His college counselor really messed up! No one should apply only to reaches and safeties.
Anonymous wrote:I think the real question should be why are so many people so completely, irrationally OBSESSED with HYP? It’s insane.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't agree that there are a million other kids with 800 Math SAT and 800 Physics Subject test. College is about academics. Or it should be. And he should have gotten into one of these schools. There are not that many more qualified applicants. The college have chosen to make bullshit excuses for some other agenda to select less qualified kids. I don't even know what that agenda is. But come on people, college IS about the ability to score 800 on a Physics test!!!Yes, there are some discrepancies they have to sort out being different grades and should put a little weight on recommendations or ECs but only when comparing kids in the same bucket. I have no dog in this fight. My kids at 1250 and 1450 -- not Ivy. But people actually think this is fair -- I don't get it. Maybe he worked to get so smart or maybe he was born that way ---- doesn't even matter to me. This isn't a job interview. It is selection into an academic program - why should it be based on this. I am disgusted but wish him well.
How many times must it be pointed out that there are way more qualified applicants than available seats? It’s not hard to understand. As a PP pointed out, there are 50,000 students who were top of their class (valedictorians and salutatorians) but only 20,000 Ivy League spots.
BS that there are 50,000 kids with 800 on Math SAT and 800 on Physics.
Anonymous wrote:A friend of mine said her son is a valedictorian in a magnet program in NJ which normally sent 20+ to Ivies. This year, the best school her son can get into in is Georgia Tech.
BTW, her son is Asian.
Anonymous wrote:It has never been a meritocracy. The Jews knew this in the last century when the Ivies imposed limits on their numbers. The Asians have known this for the last few decades, too, with the limits put on them.
This leads to various forms of corruption, major (donors buying a building), minor (Varsity Blues), and moral (athletics), etc.
It stinks to high heaven.
Anonymous wrote:A friend of mine said her son is a valedictorian in a magnet program in NJ which normally sent 20+ to Ivies. This year, the best school her son can get into in is Georgia Tech.
BTW, her son is Asian.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do you keep insisting that high test scores are enough?
because they are the closest thing there is to a national objective statistic. Of course the people disappointed when their high scorer gets rejected are the same people who think it's about earning a spot based on merit (never has been and never will be)
You should open the college where high test scores are all a kid needs then. Why are they spending 4 years in high school if all they need are a high test score. You should fix that nonsense.