Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you that crazy poster who was anti-ivy schools, especially Harvard, on the Jeopardy thread a few weeks back?
No, I have nothing against ivies.
This may be anecdotal evidence, but at DS's school everyone who scored near 2400 with little preparation got into ivies and top schools. It's all the not-so-smart kids whose parents shelled out hundreds of dollars for test prep classes and managed to boost their scores who didn't.
Most of the posters on College Confidential's major problem is that they assume college admissions officers are naive idiots who automatically assume higher test scores = smarter kids.
My question is how do admissions officers know who has received SAT tutoring and who hasn't? My DC made excellent scores on SATs with no tutoring other than the practice workbook. Do they just assume the higher-scoring kids had tutors? If so, that seems extremely unfair to those who were never tutored.
In general those that spend resources and time on their children do better in life. It's too bad you didn't do the best for your kid who could have scored higher with proper test prep.
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Getting a perfect score will give you a scholarship so this is worth it
You have to get in first, and there are no guarantees, perfect score or not.
College Confidential is full of 2400-scorers who are agonizing over why they didn't get into their 1st, even 2nd choice schools.
No, College Confidential is full of people who only scored 2200+ with heavy tutoring agonizing over how the college admissions officers saw through their ruse.
Are you that crazy poster who was anti-ivy schools, especially Harvard, on the Jeopardy thread a few weeks back?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The kids who tend to do very well on SAT without studying tend to also do very well in non-SAT related things.
This can also cut against students with very high SAT scores, but less than perfect gpa, because the less-than-perfect gpa may be asignal that the very bright student did not work hard, or turn in assignments, etc.
Having a gpa that matches the SAT score is probably better than having a super-high SAT score but a 3.7 gpa.
This is such a gross distortion of reality. What a pretentious and presumptuous person you are. You don't think a 3.7 is a high GPA?
Anonymous wrote:The kids who tend to do very well on SAT without studying tend to also do very well in non-SAT related things.
This can also cut against students with very high SAT scores, but less than perfect gpa, because the less-than-perfect gpa may be asignal that the very bright student did not work hard, or turn in assignments, etc.
Having a gpa that matches the SAT score is probably better than having a super-high SAT score but a 3.7 gpa.
Anonymous wrote:The kids who tend to do very well on SAT without studying tend to also do very well in non-SAT related things.
This can also cut against students with very high SAT scores, but less than perfect gpa, because the less-than-perfect gpa may be asignal that the very bright student did not work hard, or turn in assignments, etc.
Having a gpa that matches the SAT score is probably better than having a super-high SAT score but a 3.7 gpa.
The kids who tend to do very well on SAT without studying tend to also do very well in non-SAT related things.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you that crazy poster who was anti-ivy schools, especially Harvard, on the Jeopardy thread a few weeks back?
No, I have nothing against ivies.
This may be anecdotal evidence, but at DS's school everyone who scored near 2400 with little preparation got into ivies and top schools. It's all the not-so-smart kids whose parents shelled out hundreds of dollars for test prep classes and managed to boost their scores who didn't.
Most of the posters on College Confidential's major problem is that they assume college admissions officers are naive idiots who automatically assume higher test scores = smarter kids.
My question is how do admissions officers know who has received SAT tutoring and who hasn't? My DC made excellent scores on SATs with no tutoring other than the practice workbook. Do they just assume the higher-scoring kids had tutors? If so, that seems extremely unfair to those who were never tutored.
In general those that spend resources and time on their children do better in life. It's too bad you didn't do the best for your kid who could have scored higher with proper test prep.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you that crazy poster who was anti-ivy schools, especially Harvard, on the Jeopardy thread a few weeks back?
No, I have nothing against ivies.
This may be anecdotal evidence, but at DS's school everyone who scored near 2400 with little preparation got into ivies and top schools. It's all the not-so-smart kids whose parents shelled out hundreds of dollars for test prep classes and managed to boost their scores who didn't.
Most of the posters on College Confidential's major problem is that they assume college admissions officers are naive idiots who automatically assume higher test scores = smarter kids.
My question is how do admissions officers know who has received SAT tutoring and who hasn't? My DC made excellent scores on SATs with no tutoring other than the practice workbook. Do they just assume the higher-scoring kids had tutors? If so, that seems extremely unfair to those who were never tutored.
What a pretentious and snarky statement. How do you know that PP's kid didn't do as well as your snowflake?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you that crazy poster who was anti-ivy schools, especially Harvard, on the Jeopardy thread a few weeks back?
No, I have nothing against ivies.
This may be anecdotal evidence, but at DS's school everyone who scored near 2400 with little preparation got into ivies and top schools. It's all the not-so-smart kids whose parents shelled out hundreds of dollars for test prep classes and managed to boost their scores who didn't.
Most of the posters on College Confidential's major problem is that they assume college admissions officers are naive idiots who automatically assume higher test scores = smarter kids.
My question is how do admissions officers know who has received SAT tutoring and who hasn't? My DC made excellent scores on SATs with no tutoring other than the practice workbook. Do they just assume the higher-scoring kids had tutors? If so, that seems extremely unfair to those who were never tutored.
In general those that spend resources and time on their children do better in life. It's too bad you didn't do the best for your kid who could have scored higher with proper test prep.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you that crazy poster who was anti-ivy schools, especially Harvard, on the Jeopardy thread a few weeks back?
No, I have nothing against ivies.
This may be anecdotal evidence, but at DS's school everyone who scored near 2400 with little preparation got into ivies and top schools. It's all the not-so-smart kids whose parents shelled out hundreds of dollars for test prep classes and managed to boost their scores who didn't.
Most of the posters on College Confidential's major problem is that they assume college admissions officers are naive idiots who automatically assume higher test scores = smarter kids.
My question is how do admissions officers know who has received SAT tutoring and who hasn't? My DC made excellent scores on SATs with no tutoring other than the practice workbook. Do they just assume the higher-scoring kids had tutors? If so, that seems extremely unfair to those who were never tutored.