Anonymous wrote:Test scores don’t tell schools much. I hope they go away.
GPA does tell a ton no matter how rigorous your school is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Aren’t test scores the number one way for students to understand if they qualify for a university? Without them, how will a student choose? GPA can’t be used because high schools use different scales. Course rigor also varies between schools. Do the number of AP classes and their scores become the new placement proxy? It seems challenging to benchmark ECs and many of the most selective schools don’t care about them unless you’re a recruiter athlete. Right now, it seems like both colleges and students are betting that testing does NOT go away so that both can select each other. Thoughts?
GPA can be used, is being used, and has been used. Most colleges know that schools use different scales and have different degrees of rigor.
But just because the schools know how to evaluate GPAs in the context of different schools doesn't mean the students will and will know how to create their application list accordingly.
Anonymous wrote:Next step: abandon the use of GPA so they can do whatever they want.
Anonymous wrote:Nothing against APs since my kid took over a dozen, but using APs is far worse for students in small communities whose school don't have the funding or the critical mass to offer lots of APs.
Makes the SAT look much fairer by comparison.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Aren’t test scores the number one way for students to understand if they qualify for a university? Without them, how will a student choose? GPA can’t be used because high schools use different scales. Course rigor also varies between schools. Do the number of AP classes and their scores become the new placement proxy? It seems challenging to benchmark ECs and many of the most selective schools don’t care about them unless you’re a recruiter athlete. Right now, it seems like both colleges and students are betting that testing does NOT go away so that both can select each other. Thoughts?
GPA can be used, is being used, and has been used. Most colleges know that schools use different scales and have different degrees of rigor.
But just because the schools know how to evaluate GPAs in the context of different schools doesn't mean the students will and will know how to create their application list accordingly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Students will (hopefully) apply to colleges that are the right fit for them based on things like:
major
urban\suburban\rural
Sports, intramurals, clubs
Small, medium, large student body
amenities
distance from home
networking & opportunities
social - parties, frats
dorms
walkability
Also colleges will still recruit students. So maybe instead of only recruiting athletes or academic superstars they will look to balance the student body:
- increasing students from rural communities, the pacific coast, or specific states
- filling the 10 spots available in the culinary arts
- recruit students that played a musical instrument
- focusing on C students because they have a strong support network or even students that are the first in their families to go to college or ELL students
But nothing you’ve listed has to do with educational rigor. Most parents don’t want to pay $80k x 4 for a country club or a playground experience. Believe me, something will emerge that will be a type of ranking/selectivity indicator because competitive students, parents, employers, and even better colleges will demand it. The worst would be some non-transparent system that no one acknowledges but actually controls admission. In sum, we need some time of standardized credential for ACADEMIC RIGOR with a curve for socioeconomic context.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Aren’t test scores the number one way for students to understand if they qualify for a university? Without them, how will a student choose? GPA can’t be used because high schools use different scales. Course rigor also varies between schools. Do the number of AP classes and their scores become the new placement proxy? It seems challenging to benchmark ECs and many of the most selective schools don’t care about them unless you’re a recruiter athlete. Right now, it seems like both colleges and students are betting that testing does NOT go away so that both can select each other. Thoughts?
GPA can be used, is being used, and has been used. Most colleges know that schools use different scales and have different degrees of rigor.
Anonymous wrote:Students will (hopefully) apply to colleges that are the right fit for them based on things like:
major
urban\suburban\rural
Sports, intramurals, clubs
Small, medium, large student body
amenities
distance from home
networking & opportunities
social - parties, frats
dorms
walkability
Also colleges will still recruit students. So maybe instead of only recruiting athletes or academic superstars they will look to balance the student body:
- increasing students from rural communities, the pacific coast, or specific states
- filling the 10 spots available in the culinary arts
- recruit students that played a musical instrument
- focusing on C students because they have a strong support network or even students that are the first in their families to go to college or ELL students
Anonymous wrote:Next step: abandon the use of GPA so they can do whatever they want.
Anonymous wrote:Aren’t test scores the number one way for students to understand if they qualify for a university? Without them, how will a student choose? GPA can’t be used because high schools use different scales. Course rigor also varies between schools. Do the number of AP classes and their scores become the new placement proxy? It seems challenging to benchmark ECs and many of the most selective schools don’t care about them unless you’re a recruiter athlete. Right now, it seems like both colleges and students are betting that testing does NOT go away so that both can select each other. Thoughts?
Anonymous wrote:OP, I think this is a significant issue. With no score, a kid with 6-8 APs and a GPA anywhere from (loosely!!) 3.8-4.0 cannot guess what their chances are like at any school in the top 50, beyond the obvious that a top 10 will be a bigger reach. The GPA range is too narrow, and it is compounded by the fact that GPAs are not standardized and cannot be equated across high schools. High school students will struggle to understand how they compare, where they fit - this is already happening with class of 2021, thus the increase in apps to hedge one's bets.
Anonymous wrote:Test scores don’t tell schools much. I hope they go away.
GPA does tell a ton no matter how rigorous your school is.