Anonymous wrote:Why do you assume the legacies are dumb? The Princeton student newspaper’s survey shows legacy have higher SATs than non legacies. They also broke out scores by athletes, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Plenty of super smart legacy (as in higher scores than the non-legacy admits). Some percentage of athletes are super smart too. I’m not even getting into “academically compromised.” This is just ridiculous.
Is it really 100%? Would you confidently say that - then even Top 20 schools—with their athlete and legacy admits—should still end up with about 75% academically strong students.
Anonymous wrote:The fact that you’re purportedly concerned about academic strength, yet you are asking an LLM, when anyone with any critical thinking skills would understand the LLM’s answer is based on no data, shows how dumb this is.
Anonymous wrote:Plenty of super smart legacy (as in higher scores than the non-legacy admits). Some percentage of athletes are super smart too. I’m not even getting into “academically compromised.” This is just ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Consultant polished, packaged, fake spikes" are not hooked.
There are tons of fake awards—people call them “spikes.” The forum said private schools like them because they show the family has money and can afford tuition.
You can show you are full pay in many, many other ways.
I just want a school with plenty of competent students who are actually there to learn. Going to college just to show off wealth or status is stupid
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Consultant polished, packaged, fake spikes" are not hooked.
There are tons of fake awards—people call them “spikes.” The forum said private schools like them because they show the family has money and can afford tuition.
The simple way to show full pay is to not check the "do you need financial aid" box. Save yourself some work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Consultant polished, packaged, fake spikes" are not hooked.
There are tons of fake awards—people call them “spikes.” The forum said private schools like them because they show the family has money and can afford tuition.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Consultant polished, packaged, fake spikes" are not hooked.
There are tons of fake awards—people call them “spikes.” The forum said private schools like them because they show the family has money and can afford tuition.
You can show you are full pay in many, many other ways.
Anonymous wrote:If I asked AI to calculate the ratio to rule out the hooked admit:
* Athletic recruit
* Legacy or donation
* Academically compromised groups
* Consultant polished, packaged, fake spikes
It leaves 25% of the student body. Does this sound about right? Do we have higher ratio in public universities than private?