Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They have the highest state population with over 50 public university options. Figure it out. Not everyone goes to college. I have little respect for an UMC kid whining about going to UC Davis instead of Stanford or Berkeley.
Yup. I’d also like to see some hard data on all these kids with “amazing” stats that did not get into a single UC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Florida's test scores outperform California's. Let that sink in.
I think Mississippi outperforms California as well.
Anonymous wrote:Florida's test scores outperform California's. Let that sink in.
Anonymous wrote:Everyone talks about how competitive the DMV area is, but it's even worse in California. In the Bay Area, every large high school is just as competitive as Langley or McLean in NOVA. Everyone is taking 15+ AP classes and getting 5s on the scores. Teachers refuse to give out As. Sports teams are impossible to join. Extracurriculars are impossible to stand out. Everyone is doing research, starting non-profits, winning chess tournaments, and doing other niche extracurriculars. And it sucks too because high schools in LA, Orange County, and San Diego are also brutally competitive and cutthroat. It's why someone with straight As in California can get denied from UC Riverside.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The UC's admit by high school. So a low performing high school in the ghetto will get as many acceptances as a high performing one.
The trick is to be in one of these school.
University High in Irvine is treated the same as Dominguez High in Compton. University High has 30 plus SAT NMSF, 100 Commended scholars. Dominguez High has zero.
Dominguez High sends the same amount of students to Berkeley and UCLA as does University High.
Honey, you shouldn't say things that are easily proven wrong. Dominguez High had 14 admitted to Berkeley and UCLA. University High had 55.
https://www.universityofcalifornia.edu/about-us/information-center/admissions-source-school
Anonymous wrote:Zero meritocracy in CA. As some one pointed earlier CC to UC is the popular option, unfortunately.
Kids admitted to USC and rejected from UC Davis.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everyone talks about how competitive the DMV area is, but it's even worse in California. In the Bay Area, every large high school is just as competitive as Langley or McLean in NOVA. Everyone is taking 15+ AP classes and getting 5s on the scores. Teachers refuse to give out As. Sports teams are impossible to join. Extracurriculars are impossible to stand out. Everyone is doing research, starting non-profits, winning chess tournaments, and doing other niche extracurriculars. And it sucks too because high schools in LA, Orange County, and San Diego are also brutally competitive and cutthroat. It's why someone with straight As in California can get denied from UC Riverside.
UC Riverside accepts 75% of in-state applicants.
Of course, yes someone is part of the 25%...seems hard to believe it is a straight A student taking tons of APs.
At my high school, I was not even in the top 40% despite having straight As in 12 APs
Anonymous wrote:They have the highest state population with over 50 public university options. Figure it out. Not everyone goes to college. I have little respect for an UMC kid whining about going to UC Davis instead of Stanford or Berkeley.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The UC's admit by high school. So a low performing high school in the ghetto will get as many acceptances as a high performing one.
The trick is to be in one of these school.
University High in Irvine is treated the same as Dominguez High in Compton. University High has 30 plus SAT NMSF, 100 Commended scholars. Dominguez High has zero.
Dominguez High sends the same amount of students to Berkeley and UCLA as does University High.
Honey, you shouldn't say things that are easily proven wrong. Dominguez High had 14 admitted to Berkeley and UCLA. University High had 55.
https://www.universityofcalifornia.edu/about-us/information-center/admissions-source-school