Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Instead of generalizing, look at the individual students one by one.
p.s. My kid EARNED A's at a large public, AP scores of 5, and great College Board scores. YMMV.
Then in your case, your kid likely did not get an 1100 on the SAT. If a kid gets an 1100, why should a school not see that important data point too?
Anonymous wrote:Ok, can someone please explain how this makes any sense?
I know plenty of kids in this admissions cycle who have low (think, 1100) SATs but have high GPAs (4.0 range) from big public schools that grade inflate. These kids are going test optional and are getting into colleges that would normally be out of reach when SATs were required. This year, they get to hide their low SAT from the colleges.
On the other hand, I know plenty of kids at private schools that grade-deflate but who have strong grades (taking that grade deflation into account, say 3.8) and sky high SATs who are being deferred and rejected from safeties. In the past, the high SATs balanced out the grade deflation, but this year it seems meaningless because schools are filling spots with kids who didn't show an SAT.
This system is a joke but it is also very damaging. There under qualified kids who are making tic toc videos mocking the system. On the other hand, you have high achieving students who've worked their a$# off and who are getting shut out. Makes no sense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ok, can someone please explain how this makes any sense?
I know plenty of kids in this admissions cycle who have low (think, 1100) SATs but have high GPAs (4.0 range) from big public schools that grade inflate. These kids are going test optional and are getting into colleges that would normally be out of reach when SATs were required. This year, they get to hide their low SAT from the colleges.
On the other hand, I know plenty of kids at private schools that grade-deflate but who have strong grades (taking that grade deflation into account, say 3.8) and sky high SATs who are being deferred and rejected from safeties. In the past, the high SATs balanced out the grade deflation, but this year it seems meaningless because schools are filling spots with kids who didn't show an SAT.
This system is a joke but it is also very damaging. There under qualified kids who are making tic toc videos mocking the system. On the other hand, you have high achieving students who've worked their a$# off and who are getting shut out. Makes no sense.
Ummm...you are the one that out the kid in the deluxe private school. If it so bad, get DC out of there
PS - it's not just a private school issue. It's also about the kids in a large public schools who may have taken classes with a teachers who grades harshly. The SAT has always been a leveling tool so that these discrepancies can be put into perspective.
Use the SAT to your advantage. Prep prep prep and get a high score.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ok, can someone please explain how this makes any sense?
I know plenty of kids in this admissions cycle who have low (think, 1100) SATs but have high GPAs (4.0 range) from big public schools that grade inflate. These kids are going test optional and are getting into colleges that would normally be out of reach when SATs were required. This year, they get to hide their low SAT from the colleges.
On the other hand, I know plenty of kids at private schools that grade-deflate but who have strong grades (taking that grade deflation into account, say 3.8) and sky high SATs who are being deferred and rejected from safeties. In the past, the high SATs balanced out the grade deflation, but this year it seems meaningless because schools are filling spots with kids who didn't show an SAT.
This system is a joke but it is also very damaging. There under qualified kids who are making tic toc videos mocking the system. On the other hand, you have high achieving students who've worked their a$# off and who are getting shut out. Makes no sense.
Ummm...you are the one that out the kid in the deluxe private school. If it so bad, get DC out of there
PS - it's not just a private school issue. It's also about the kids in a large public schools who may have taken classes with a teachers who grades harshly. The SAT has always been a leveling tool so that these discrepancies can be put into perspective.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Instead of generalizing, look at the individual students one by one.
p.s. My kid EARNED A's at a large public, AP scores of 5, and great College Board scores. YMMV.
Then in your case, your kid likely did not get an 1100 on the SAT. If a kid gets an 1100, why should a school not see that important data point too?
I’m not the PP, but I have a kid who is a poor test-taker and one who is not.
Ok. But what about the kid who bombed his math final and got a C on the report card. He can't just wipe that grade out. If the college has to see that, why shouldn't the college see the low SAT for another kid.
All the relevant info should have to be submitted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ok, can someone please explain how this makes any sense?
I know plenty of kids in this admissions cycle who have low (think, 1100) SATs but have high GPAs (4.0 range) from big public schools that grade inflate. These kids are going test optional and are getting into colleges that would normally be out of reach when SATs were required. This year, they get to hide their low SAT from the colleges.
On the other hand, I know plenty of kids at private schools that grade-deflate but who have strong grades (taking that grade deflation into account, say 3.8) and sky high SATs who are being deferred and rejected from safeties. In the past, the high SATs balanced out the grade deflation, but this year it seems meaningless because schools are filling spots with kids who didn't show an SAT.
This system is a joke but it is also very damaging. There under qualified kids who are making tic toc videos mocking the system. On the other hand, you have high achieving students who've worked their a$# off and who are getting shut out. Makes no sense.
Ummm...you are the one that out the kid in the deluxe private school. If it so bad, get DC out of there
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Instead of generalizing, look at the individual students one by one.
p.s. My kid EARNED A's at a large public, AP scores of 5, and great College Board scores. YMMV.
Then in your case, your kid likely did not get an 1100 on the SAT. If a kid gets an 1100, why should a school not see that important data point too?
I’m not the PP, but I have a kid who is a poor test-taker and one who is not.
Anonymous wrote:Ok, can someone please explain how this makes any sense?
I know plenty of kids in this admissions cycle who have low (think, 1100) SATs but have high GPAs (4.0 range) from big public schools that grade inflate. These kids are going test optional and are getting into colleges that would normally be out of reach when SATs were required. This year, they get to hide their low SAT from the colleges.
On the other hand, I know plenty of kids at private schools that grade-deflate but who have strong grades (taking that grade deflation into account, say 3.8) and sky high SATs who are being deferred and rejected from safeties. In the past, the high SATs balanced out the grade deflation, but this year it seems meaningless because schools are filling spots with kids who didn't show an SAT.
This system is a joke but it is also very damaging. There under qualified kids who are making tic toc videos mocking the system. On the other hand, you have high achieving students who've worked their a$# off and who are getting shut out. Makes no sense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Instead of generalizing, look at the individual students one by one.
p.s. My kid EARNED A's at a large public, AP scores of 5, and great College Board scores. YMMV.
Then in your case, your kid likely did not get an 1100 on the SAT. If a kid gets an 1100, why should a school not see that important data point too?
Anonymous wrote:4 years of high grades in hard classes are more impressive than prepping for a 4 hour test that you can take multiple times and submit your top scores. Most schools are going to be moving away form standardized tests sooner than later.