Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At a visit at one of the WASP schools last spring, the AO giving the info session mentioned that they were "need affirmative," suggesting that applicants with high financial need were given a boost in the admissions process. Does anyone have information or experience about this? I don't see how it would work if the school is, as they claim to be, "need blind," as they wouldn't even know who has high financial need. But maybe their version of "need blind" means that need won't hurt you, but it can help you.
Someone is lying or misunderstanding. The question is "who?"
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2023/07/24/upshot/ivy-league-elite-college-admissions.html
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Some colleges are already doing what they call “need-affirmative admissions,” for the purpose of selecting more students from the low end of the income spectrum, though they often don’t publicly acknowledge it for fear of blowback.
There is a tool, Landscape from the College Board, to help determine if an applicant grew up in a neighborhood with significant privilege or adversity. But these colleges have no knowledge of parents’ income if students don’t apply for financial aid.
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I'm wondering what it means for campus life. Do kids at these schools feel a big divide between the haves and the have-nots?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At a visit at one of the WASP schools last spring, the AO giving the info session mentioned that they were "need affirmative," suggesting that applicants with high financial need were given a boost in the admissions process. Does anyone have information or experience about this? I don't see how it would work if the school is, as they claim to be, "need blind," as they wouldn't even know who has high financial need. But maybe their version of "need blind" means that need won't hurt you, but it can help you.
Someone is lying or misunderstanding. The question is "who?"
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2023/07/24/upshot/ivy-league-elite-college-admissions.html
"
Some colleges are already doing what they call “need-affirmative admissions,” for the purpose of selecting more students from the low end of the income spectrum, though they often don’t publicly acknowledge it for fear of blowback.
There is a tool, Landscape from the College Board, to help determine if an applicant grew up in a neighborhood with significant privilege or adversity. But these colleges have no knowledge of parents’ income if students don’t apply for financial aid.
"
Anonymous wrote:Affirmative-action for need?
How is that insulated from race?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Affirmative-action for need?
How is that insulated from race?
Why would it need to be insulated from race? They can’t use fake proxies but they can have real institutional priorities that tend to favor one race over another. Otherwise no school could consider test scores.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Logically, if someone has high need, they probably didn't have the resources, quality of education, support, or opportunities that applicants from rich families did. The child of lawyers in McLean shouldn't be judged by the same academic standards as the child of a single mother who never attended college from Anacostia. E.g., someone from that background who has a 1400 SAT score and a 3 on a few APs will probably do much better in college than the lawyer's kid with a 1550 and 5s on a dozen APs.
The actual data shows that SAT scores predict the same across SES. In other words, on average, a rich kid who scores a 1400 performs the same as a poor kid that scores a 1400.
Anonymous wrote:Logically, if someone has high need, they probably didn't have the resources, quality of education, support, or opportunities that applicants from rich families did. The child of lawyers in McLean shouldn't be judged by the same academic standards as the child of a single mother who never attended college from Anacostia. E.g., someone from that background who has a 1400 SAT score and a 3 on a few APs will probably do much better in college than the lawyer's kid with a 1550 and 5s on a dozen APs.
Anonymous wrote:At a visit at one of the WASP schools last spring, the AO giving the info session mentioned that they were "need affirmative," suggesting that applicants with high financial need were given a boost in the admissions process. Does anyone have information or experience about this? I don't see how it would work if the school is, as they claim to be, "need blind," as they wouldn't even know who has high financial need. But maybe their version of "need blind" means that need won't hurt you, but it can help you.
Anonymous wrote:Logically, if someone has high need, they probably didn't have the resources, quality of education, support, or opportunities that applicants from rich families did. The child of lawyers in McLean shouldn't be judged by the same academic standards as the child of a single mother who never attended college from Anacostia. E.g., someone from that background who has a 1400 SAT score and a 3 on a few APs will probably do much better in college than the lawyer's kid with a 1550 and 5s on a dozen APs.
Anonymous wrote:All of the WASP are need blind (at least for domestic students) so how do they know if a kid is Pell eligible? Aren’t the financial aid offices separate from admissions?
Anonymous wrote:At a visit at one of the WASP schools last spring, the AO giving the info session mentioned that they were "need affirmative," suggesting that applicants with high financial need were given a boost in the admissions process. Does anyone have information or experience about this? I don't see how it would work if the school is, as they claim to be, "need blind," as they wouldn't even know who has high financial need. But maybe their version of "need blind" means that need won't hurt you, but it can help you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At a visit at one of the WASP schools last spring, the AO giving the info session mentioned that they were "need affirmative," suggesting that applicants with high financial need were given a boost in the admissions process. Does anyone have information or experience about this? I don't see how it would work if the school is, as they claim to be, "need blind," as they wouldn't even know who has high financial need. But maybe their version of "need blind" means that need won't hurt you, but it can help you.
I work in this space and can confirm that some formerly need-blind schools are turning to these policies in an effort to ensure continued socioeconomic diversity post-SFFA. As a technical matter, this approach isn’t “need-blind,” so if they described themselves as “need-affirmative,” you probably won’t find “need-blind” on their website anymore. And these schools are avoiding the term “need-aware” because of its connotation of favoring wealthy students.
Pell eligibility is often the marker these schools use to implement this policy; they’ll set a goal of increasing the percentage of Pell eligible students and use this factor in admissions.
Anonymous wrote:OP, do you think the term the AO used was "need-aware"? Because that's the term they use, not "need-affirmative".