Anonymous wrote:I wish they would remove the aspects that a kid can never change..race, gender, zip code, rural, parents education etc. These new categories are all driven by social mobility points in the ranking systems.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wish they would remove the aspects that a kid can never change..race, gender, zip code, rural, parents education etc. These new categories are all driven by social mobility points in the ranking systems.
SAT score is something a kid can easily change / improve by working hard. But a high stats kid will often be mocked on DCUM. DCUMers will tell you that 1590 is no different from 1490. TO kids are better than strivers, blah blah.
It’s surreal yet it’s the reality.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is everyone so bitter?
There are no clear "rules" or standards for admission. Two seemingly identical applicants can have two very different outcomes, leading to very logical feelings of unfairness.
So. That’s how job interviews work too.
You need a baseline. Then everything else is vibes.
This is life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is everyone so bitter?
There are no clear "rules" or standards for admission. Two seemingly identical applicants can have two very different outcomes, leading to very logical feelings of unfairness.
Anonymous wrote:There are plenty of colleges that admit just based on numbers. Apply to those if you’re so upset by selective admissions.
Anonymous wrote:Why is everyone so bitter?
Anonymous wrote:I wish they would remove the aspects that a kid can never change..race, gender, zip code, rural, parents education etc. These new categories are all driven by social mobility points in the ranking systems.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's standardless admissions. And a double whammy when you add in Test Optional.
Huh?
Some schools have always been test optional.
Standardless?
No - they aren’t just looking for kids who test well. That’s boring.
Anonymous wrote:It's means if you are not hooked, you are not getting in.