Anonymous wrote:The old folks have been complaining about this process since at least the early 1960s, when Yale folded the then-less-competitive school of engineering into the school of arts and sciences. OP benefitted from a system that put less and less weight on ancestry and more and more weight on academic achievement and then — what? expected that process to stop at the exact point where it would most benefit their family forever? That’s not how a one-way ratchet works.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The first page of this essay explains it pretty well.
https://lesshighschoolstress.com/
Parent of a Kindergartener here - You have just saved me 12 years of stress!
Anonymous wrote:Thank the boomers for destroying the USA standard of living
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Deep in the last century, I got into Carnegie Mellon engineering after getting decent (not great) grades at a good (not great) public high school in Pittsburgh. My teens are technically minded but I recognize that they have little chance of getting into the same school. Getting decent grades at a decent public high school in our area simply isn't going to get them in.
The stakes are higher, the competition is much much tougher and Carnegie Mellon, like a lot schools, is drawing from a much larger pool of applicants. The US has a large share of the most desirable schools on the planet. Yes, more Americans are applying to American colleges than a generation ago. That probably goes triple for the rest of the world. And all of these kids are smarter than I was.
And then there's the cost of going to Carnegie Mellon in 2023.....yeah, that's not going to happen.
Took DD to Carnegie Mellon. NOt an engineer, an actress. It's beautiful there. We loved it. Too competitive and too pricey. But wonderful. Ain't happenin...
Anonymous wrote:The first page of this essay explains it pretty well.
https://lesshighschoolstress.com/
Anonymous wrote:Deep in the last century, I got into Carnegie Mellon engineering after getting decent (not great) grades at a good (not great) public high school in Pittsburgh. My teens are technically minded but I recognize that they have little chance of getting into the same school. Getting decent grades at a decent public high school in our area simply isn't going to get them in.
The stakes are higher, the competition is much much tougher and Carnegie Mellon, like a lot schools, is drawing from a much larger pool of applicants. The US has a large share of the most desirable schools on the planet. Yes, more Americans are applying to American colleges than a generation ago. That probably goes triple for the rest of the world. And all of these kids are smarter than I was.
And then there's the cost of going to Carnegie Mellon in 2023.....yeah, that's not going to happen.
Anonymous wrote:It’s a sad statement that a HYPSM grad can’t puzzle out the math on this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a sad statement that a HYPSM grad can’t puzzle out the math on this.
ALDC with an easy major