Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have not explained how this case is an example of discrimination.
I have never seen a thread on DCUM where racism against Asian Americans is admitted as a possibility. I won’t say this is one but there is no denying that some ivy league colleges have downrated Asian American applicants. When a kid says they were taunted with racist slurs, DCUM says it’s normal teen trash talk or a made up story. I could go on but what’s the point?
It more than a possibility but I don't see how this time too has anything to do with discrimination. There is no way a short list of AP grades, one sat score, and 2 sat subject test scores will convince us that this student was a shoe in for those insanely difficult colleges.
+1 And I assume his grades were competitive and he took challenging classes. However, his EC's were unremarkable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have not explained how this case is an example of discrimination.
I have never seen a thread on DCUM where racism against Asian Americans is admitted as a possibility. I won’t say this is one but there is no denying that some ivy league colleges have downrated Asian American applicants. When a kid says they were taunted with racist slurs, DCUM says it’s normal teen trash talk or a made up story. I could go on but what’s the point?
It more than a possibility but I don't see how this time too has anything to do with discrimination. There is no way a short list of AP grades, one sat score, and 2 sat subject test scores will convince us that this student was a shoe in for those insanely difficult colleges.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have not explained how this case is an example of discrimination.
I have never seen a thread on DCUM where racism against Asian Americans is admitted as a possibility. I won’t say this is one but there is no denying that some ivy league colleges have downrated Asian American applicants. When a kid says they were taunted with racist slurs, DCUM says it’s normal teen trash talk or a made up story. I could go on but what’s the point?
Anonymous wrote:1590 is not enough. Even if super scoring were not possible, 1400 other kids have that same score. And many thousands have scores in that neighborhood. That needs to be accompanied by great grades in the most rigorous classes and other accomplishments.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have not explained how this case is an example of discrimination.
I have never seen a thread on DCUM where racism against Asian Americans is admitted as a possibility. I won’t say this is one but there is no denying that some ivy league colleges have downrated Asian American applicants. When a kid says they were taunted with racist slurs, DCUM says it’s normal teen trash talk or a made up story. I could go on but what’s the point?
Anonymous wrote:You have not explained how this case is an example of discrimination.
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: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.
+100
Ivy Leagues plus MIT, CalTech, and that tier of school is a reach for EVERYONE. I was surprised he was waitlisted by CMU though.
Anonymous wrote: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.
+100
Ivy Leagues plus MIT, CalTech, and that tier of school is a reach for EVERYONE. I was surprised he was waitlisted by CMU though.
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.