Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In an ever changing diverse and fluid world, why are some fighting for rigidly and narrowly defined merit achievements?
What is a true achievement anyway?
How can we differentiate talent from cogs in the machine?
You can differentiate talent from cogs in the machine by holistically looking at a lot of information. GPA, courses taken, test scores, major achievements, essays, and recommendations all considered holistically and with consideration for the kid's personal circumstances would lead to the best outcomes. Ignoring or minimizing courseloads, recommendations, test scores, and achievements because not all kids may have had equal access is absurd and will lead to a lot of mediocre kids being admitted into elite programs.
Anonymous wrote:In an ever changing diverse and fluid world, why are some fighting for rigidly and narrowly defined merit achievements?
What is a true achievement anyway?
How can we differentiate talent from cogs in the machine?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In an ever changing diverse and fluid world, why are some fighting for rigidly and narrowly defined merit achievements?
What is a true achievement anyway?
How can we differentiate talent from cogs in the machine?
In sports, it's usually pretty obvious - which is why sports are so popular.
In academics, I'd say getting all the questions right on a hard math test shows merit -- I mean just look at the curve in the class scores. This can't be a serious question?
It is a serious question.
In sports it’s clear, if you take performance enhancers it’s cheating.
In school is nebulous. You take performance enhancers in the form of test prep and other services, and it’s considered hard work.
Prep for tests, like the SAT or GRE or in class tests, is similar to personal training in sports.
Prep for tests like the NNAT, CoGAT, WiSC is like using steroids or performance enhancers.
Some pro athletes are there due to a crazy work ethic and native ability. Some pro athletes are just insanely good and rarely practice.
Some academically advanced folks are smart but need tutors or summer prep and the like to Ace advanced classes. Some academically advanced folks can take the class as offered and crush it.
Very few average folks are going to excel in advanced academic or professional sports even with crazy levels of prep or practice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In an ever changing diverse and fluid world, why are some fighting for rigidly and narrowly defined merit achievements?
What is a true achievement anyway?
How can we differentiate talent from cogs in the machine?
In sports, it's usually pretty obvious - which is why sports are so popular.
In academics, I'd say getting all the questions right on a hard math test shows merit -- I mean just look at the curve in the class scores. This can't be a serious question?
It is a serious question.
In sports it’s clear, if you take performance enhancers it’s cheating.
In school is nebulous. You take performance enhancers in the form of test prep and other services, and it’s considered hard work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In an ever changing diverse and fluid world, why are some fighting for rigidly and narrowly defined merit achievements?
What is a true achievement anyway?
How can we differentiate talent from cogs in the machine?
In sports, it's usually pretty obvious - which is why sports are so popular.
In academics, I'd say getting all the questions right on a hard math test shows merit -- I mean just look at the curve in the class scores. This can't be a serious question?
It is a serious question.
In sports it’s clear, if you take performance enhancers it’s cheating.
In school is nebulous. You take performance enhancers in the form of test prep and other services, and it’s considered hard work.
serious answer.
-In Sports, you practice every day for a race or game. That is considered hard work.
-In Academics, you study and practice every day for a test or a course. That is considered hard work.
-In Sports, it is cheating to take drugs or give the athlete a head start of 10 minutes.
- In Academics, it is affirmative action to give a student a place in a college, course even with astounding poor grades and abilities, ahead of academically high performing students. Everyone knows what it means.
Putting aside for a moment the folly of you actually knowing who is a high performing student along every possible dimension, why is it that you believe that academic performance should be the only metric upon which students are accepted to elite schools?
The schools are businesses and they are making business decisions. If admitting your child were a good business decision, they'd do it. End of story.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In an ever changing diverse and fluid world, why are some fighting for rigidly and narrowly defined merit achievements?
What is a true achievement anyway?
How can we differentiate talent from cogs in the machine?
In sports, it's usually pretty obvious - which is why sports are so popular.
In academics, I'd say getting all the questions right on a hard math test shows merit -- I mean just look at the curve in the class scores. This can't be a serious question?
It is a serious question.
In sports it’s clear, if you take performance enhancers it’s cheating.
In school is nebulous. You take performance enhancers in the form of test prep and other services, and it’s considered hard work.
serious answer.
-In Sports, you practice every day for a race or game. That is considered hard work.
-In Academics, you study and practice every day for a test or a course. That is considered hard work.
-In Sports, it is cheating to take drugs or give the athlete a head start of 10 minutes.
- In Academics, it is affirmative action to give a student a place in a college, course even with astounding poor grades and abilities, ahead of academically high performing students. Everyone knows what it means.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In an ever changing diverse and fluid world, why are some fighting for rigidly and narrowly defined merit achievements?
What is a true achievement anyway?
How can we differentiate talent from cogs in the machine?
In sports, it's usually pretty obvious - which is why sports are so popular.
In academics, I'd say getting all the questions right on a hard math test shows merit -- I mean just look at the curve in the class scores. This can't be a serious question?
It is a serious question.
In sports it’s clear, if you take performance enhancers it’s cheating.
In school is nebulous. You take performance enhancers in the form of test prep and other services, and it’s considered hard work.
That's not the right analogy. studying and test prep is analogous to personal trainers and individual coaching. The athlete still has to put in the work. Plenty of UMC parents of young athletes spend tens of thousands on their kids.
Using Steroids would be analogous to using calculators on a non-calculator test.
Anonymous wrote:Look. Turn off the Tik-Tok. Turn off the video games. Don't spend ALL your afternoons on the playground. Go home and crack a book for a few hours a night practicing the hard subjects and turn in your assignments. This isn't magic. And above all STOP MAKING EXCUSES.
Anonymous wrote:^ my question was inspired by the arrogance and entitled poster who wants to eliminate young scholars.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In an ever changing diverse and fluid world, why are some fighting for rigidly and narrowly defined merit achievements?
What is a true achievement anyway?
How can we differentiate talent from cogs in the machine?
In sports, it's usually pretty obvious - which is why sports are so popular.
In academics, I'd say getting all the questions right on a hard math test shows merit -- I mean just look at the curve in the class scores. This can't be a serious question?
It is a serious question.
In sports it’s clear, if you take performance enhancers it’s cheating.
In school is nebulous. You take performance enhancers in the form of test prep and other services, and it’s considered hard work.
serious answer.
-In Sports, you practice every day for a race or game. That is considered hard work.
-In Academics, you study and practice every day for a test or a course. That is considered hard work.
-In Sports, it is cheating to take drugs or give the athlete a head start of 10 minutes.
- In Academics, it is affirmative action to give a student a place in a college, course even with astounding poor grades and abilities, ahead of academically high performing students. Everyone knows what it means.