Anonymous wrote:Kind of a bit of aside that is mentioned in the article, is that how the rise of Generative AI will make traditional academic skills even less important.
Linked to a study at Harvard where someone used ChatGPT 4 (paid version) to write a bunch of papers on different topics and then told the Harvard professors grading, that some of the papers were written by ChatGPT and others by qualified humans.
In reality, they were all written by ChatGPT. Papers received mostly As. Basically, the person would have received a 3.6 for the semester just having Chat GPT crank out the papers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kind of a bit of aside that is mentioned in the article, is that how the rise of Generative AI will make traditional academic skills even less important.
Linked to a study at Harvard where someone used ChatGPT 4 (paid version) to write a bunch of papers on different topics and then told the Harvard professors grading, that some of the papers were written by ChatGPT and others by qualified humans.
In reality, they were all written by ChatGPT. Papers received mostly As. Basically, the person would have received a 3.6 for the semester just having Chat GPT crank out the papers.
And that doesn’t happen at every college in the country? And most, the vast majority of T30-300 are test optional. Ha. At least you can’t use chatgpt to take your standardized test, for now. And studies show even extensive test prep will only raise test scores slightly. Your 22 ACT isn’t going to be a 35-36 ACt which you need to get into an Ivy. But a naturally smart poor kid could score that. My kid did no test prep and scored a 35 the end of sophomore year…
Oh and we are dumbing down standardized tests too…each new iteration .. shorter and easier because of all the no attention span dummies in the country
Anonymous wrote:Kind of a bit of aside that is mentioned in the article, is that how the rise of Generative AI will make traditional academic skills even less important.
Linked to a study at Harvard where someone used ChatGPT 4 (paid version) to write a bunch of papers on different topics and then told the Harvard professors grading, that some of the papers were written by ChatGPT and others by qualified humans.
In reality, they were all written by ChatGPT. Papers received mostly As. Basically, the person would have received a 3.6 for the semester just having Chat GPT crank out the papers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The critique is fine; the proposed solution is insipid. Brooks is pretty good when it comes to summarizing things that other people have been thinking and writing about for years. He isn’t much of an original thinker.
Yes. He’s proposing to rearrange the deck chairs. The fundamental problem is that the Ivies are too small for the social role they are trying to fill, and they refuse to grow. It doesn’t really matter how they fill their classes: their role as gatekeepers, and the ever-growing number of people locked out, will continue to fuel an ever-expanding populist backlash.
Please prove the bolded. There are only so many spots at the kind of employers who prefer to hire from the 3 same Ivy and Ivy-adjacent schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The critique is fine; the proposed solution is insipid. Brooks is pretty good when it comes to summarizing things that other people have been thinking and writing about for years. He isn’t much of an original thinker.
Yes. He’s proposing to rearrange the deck chairs. The fundamental problem is that the Ivies are too small for the social role they are trying to fill, and they refuse to grow. It doesn’t really matter how they fill their classes: their role as gatekeepers, and the ever-growing number of people locked out, will continue to fuel an ever-expanding populist backlash.
Anonymous wrote:They have the best financial aid for the poor. Free
Anonymous wrote:The critique is fine; the proposed solution is insipid. Brooks is pretty good when it comes to summarizing things that other people have been thinking and writing about for years. He isn’t much of an original thinker.
Anonymous wrote:
That's how every developed country functions: they have evolved a small number of elite schools from whence they pick their governing elite. It happens in the UK, France, Germany, Japan, South Korea, etc.
It's not deliberate. It's a natural evolution that springs from a very understandable human desire to cut through the noise and streamline the job application process.
Or you can do what China started two thousand years ago and have the civil service exams. They lasted until the turn of the 20th century. People studied for years. 1% made the cut.
Now India has a similar system.
Anonymous wrote:Perhaps the below take by David Brooks will make some of you rethink your Ivy obsession, especially after the election outcome we witnessed:
https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2024/12/meritocracy-college-admissions-social-economic-segregation/680392/