Anonymous wrote:Harvard-Westlake in Los Angeles published its college matriculation information with all hooked people removed! I wish the local DMV schools would do this as well.
https://students.hw.com/Portals/44/completehandbook2023.pdf
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everyone needs to be aware, if they already aren't, that admissions to the elite colleges is far more political than it was 20 years ago. It's going to be unfair to measure schools by their ability to maintain a pipeline to the elite colleges. For example, it's no secret that the percent of Jewish students at most of the Ivies have fallen noticeably in the last decade. It's not because of declining caliber of applicants, but because the adcomms are seeking out a very specific balance of students in the name of equity and diversity while keeping all their other prioritized demographics like sports or legacy or geographical diversity. That's why when you have two students with identical grades and scores but from different identity backgrounds, the chances of admissions varies hugely solely on the background. Not the grades or accomplishments. The schools cannot control for that.
At this point I doubt if there's a disadvantage to elite college admissions going to a private school because it's the same student facing the same admissions standards coming out of a good public school too. So it's a wash.
The main benefit of a good private over a public, even a good public, when it comes to college admissions is probably the middling students. Getting that extra attention and support from smaller classes and stronger faculty-student relationships and peer support can very well make a difference in fostering the academic skills to get into a better college than they might have had they stayed in the public school.
It’s always been political. Let’s not pretend this is something new simply because the winners and losers have changed. Not to mention that some of the winners have never changed.
Ehh. It's far more political now for sure. Saying it's "always" been political is sidestepping the issue and avoiding the reality elite college admissions is much more contradictory with ideals that had long been the gold standards - meritocracy. The Ivies moved away from the waspocracy starting in the late 1950s to openly embrace a more meritocratic admissions standards, but ironically they're now regressing to a different, but distinctly non meritocratic approach to admissions and one based heavily on identities (remember the waspocracy was an identity once before it was rejected as illiberal)
I do wonder how long it'll last, however. A key factor in the elite colleges stratospheric growth in the 1960s-2000 era was that they did focus on accepting the best and brightest. Now that is no longer really the case (conversations with long term faculty about changing student quality can be a real eye opener) and the best and brightest are scattered across many more colleges, which, actually, is not too different from what it was like when the Ivies were waspocracies and so many of the best and brightest were going to state universities and lesser known colleges closer to home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Harvard-Westlake in Los Angeles published its college matriculation information with all hooked people removed! I wish the local DMV schools would do this as well.
https://students.hw.com/Portals/44/completehandbook2023.pdf
Those are impressive numbers for unhooked.
This is really interesting. They have higher GPAs than some of the DC privates. Very few GPAs under 3.5.
How do you know that? Full GPAs aren’t listed.
There are very few kids with GPAs under 3.4 applying to colleges. Just a trickle compared to the mass applying with GPAs above 3.6 and even above 3.8
Okay, this is outright insane. You can’t actually believe this nonsense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Harvard-Westlake in Los Angeles published its college matriculation information with all hooked people removed! I wish the local DMV schools would do this as well.
https://students.hw.com/Portals/44/completehandbook2023.pdf
Those are impressive numbers for unhooked.
This is really interesting. They have higher GPAs than some of the DC privates. Very few GPAs under 3.5.
How do you know that? Full GPAs aren’t listed.
There are very few kids with GPAs under 3.4 applying to colleges. Just a trickle compared to the mass applying with GPAs above 3.6 and even above 3.8
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
-Privates also have a much higher URM ratio than most publics. At the top ones it's almost 50-50. These kids are gold for college admissions.
This is not true.
It's definitely true. Sidwell will graduate 40 kids this year who are URMs and very strong students. Will BCC? Whitman? Langley?
No.
This is tricky territory to talk about but it's true.
LOL....Each of those schools kill Sidwell in regard to URM. None of the top privates have a significant URM population. Clearly you know nothing about Public Schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Harvard-Westlake in Los Angeles published its college matriculation information with all hooked people removed! I wish the local DMV schools would do this as well.
https://students.hw.com/Portals/44/completehandbook2023.pdf
Those are impressive numbers for unhooked.
This is really interesting. They have higher GPAs than some of the DC privates. Very few GPAs under 3.5.
How do you know that? Full GPAs aren’t listed.
There are very few kids with GPAs under 3.4 applying to colleges. Just a trickle compared to the mass applying with GPAs above 3.6 and even above 3.8
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everyone needs to be aware, if they already aren't, that admissions to the elite colleges is far more political than it was 20 years ago. It's going to be unfair to measure schools by their ability to maintain a pipeline to the elite colleges. For example, it's no secret that the percent of Jewish students at most of the Ivies have fallen noticeably in the last decade. It's not because of declining caliber of applicants, but because the adcomms are seeking out a very specific balance of students in the name of equity and diversity while keeping all their other prioritized demographics like sports or legacy or geographical diversity. That's why when you have two students with identical grades and scores but from different identity backgrounds, the chances of admissions varies hugely solely on the background. Not the grades or accomplishments. The schools cannot control for that.
At this point I doubt if there's a disadvantage to elite college admissions going to a private school because it's the same student facing the same admissions standards coming out of a good public school too. So it's a wash.
The main benefit of a good private over a public, even a good public, when it comes to college admissions is probably the middling students. Getting that extra attention and support from smaller classes and stronger faculty-student relationships and peer support can very well make a difference in fostering the academic skills to get into a better college than they might have had they stayed in the public school.
It’s always been political. Let’s not pretend this is something new simply because the winners and losers have changed. Not to mention that some of the winners have never changed.
Anonymous wrote:Everyone needs to be aware, if they already aren't, that admissions to the elite colleges is far more political than it was 20 years ago. It's going to be unfair to measure schools by their ability to maintain a pipeline to the elite colleges. For example, it's no secret that the percent of Jewish students at most of the Ivies have fallen noticeably in the last decade. It's not because of declining caliber of applicants, but because the adcomms are seeking out a very specific balance of students in the name of equity and diversity while keeping all their other prioritized demographics like sports or legacy or geographical diversity. That's why when you have two students with identical grades and scores but from different identity backgrounds, the chances of admissions varies hugely solely on the background. Not the grades or accomplishments. The schools cannot control for that.
At this point I doubt if there's a disadvantage to elite college admissions going to a private school because it's the same student facing the same admissions standards coming out of a good public school too. So it's a wash.
The main benefit of a good private over a public, even a good public, when it comes to college admissions is probably the middling students. Getting that extra attention and support from smaller classes and stronger faculty-student relationships and peer support can very well make a difference in fostering the academic skills to get into a better college than they might have had they stayed in the public school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Harvard-Westlake in Los Angeles published its college matriculation information with all hooked people removed! I wish the local DMV schools would do this as well.
https://students.hw.com/Portals/44/completehandbook2023.pdf
Those are impressive numbers for unhooked.
This is really interesting. They have higher GPAs than some of the DC privates. Very few GPAs under 3.5.
How do you know that? Full GPAs aren’t listed.
There are very few kids with GPAs under 3.4 applying to colleges. Just a trickle compared to the mass applying with GPAs above 3.6 and even above 3.8
Did you mean to say top colleges? Surely you don’t think those with a GPA under 3.4 rarely apply to college at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Harvard-Westlake in Los Angeles published its college matriculation information with all hooked people removed! I wish the local DMV schools would do this as well.
https://students.hw.com/Portals/44/completehandbook2023.pdf
Those are impressive numbers for unhooked.
This is really interesting. They have higher GPAs than some of the DC privates. Very few GPAs under 3.5.
How do you know that? Full GPAs aren’t listed.
There are very few kids with GPAs under 3.4 applying to colleges. Just a trickle compared to the mass applying with GPAs above 3.6 and even above 3.8
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Harvard-Westlake in Los Angeles published its college matriculation information with all hooked people removed! I wish the local DMV schools would do this as well.
https://students.hw.com/Portals/44/completehandbook2023.pdf
Those are impressive numbers for unhooked.
This is really interesting. They have higher GPAs than some of the DC privates. Very few GPAs under 3.5.
How do you know that? Full GPAs aren’t listed.
Anonymous wrote:We have kids in middle school and are beginning to explore private high school options. Is it really true that kids from private schools do worse in college acceptances than similar kids from public school? We are in a county that has subpar schools and do not see many great matriculations from our high school. I can't imagine doing worse.