and that means the school just pays lip service to trying to recruit poor kids. What ECs can you do and excel at without money?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:don't be daft. Many ECs are school sanctioned clubsAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are told that admissions controls for school quality by comparing the student transcript to their school profile and don't expect students to do more than is offered by the school. Why don't they do the same with ECs? No recognition for ECs not offered by the school or that cost more than a de minimus amount?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:the EC centered holistic admissions are more likely to confer advantages on the wealthyAnonymous wrote:I work in higher ed, have lived in Asia, and visit universities and high schools in China, Japan, and Vietnam annually. My opinion is that holistic admissions are imperfect, but they are a hell of a lot better than purely grade- and test-centric admissions, which corrupt not only the colleges that rely on them but also the high schools that teach to them.
The wealthy have an advantage in nearly everything, including testing and grades. We may never have a complete meritocracy, but most AOs are trained to recognize such disparities. So the kid who does a month of volunteering in Palau on his parent's dime may not have an advantage over the kid who spends 20 hours a week at a parttime job or looking after younger siblings.
That E stands for “Extra” as in outside of
To get into top schools, you have to do more than what your school has on site. You have to go beyond. And excel at it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The College board needs to release raw scores for the AP tests. That way MIT and Cornell can see whether your 5 on Physics EM was a 98% or a 61%.
We throw away a lot of information that could be useful for everyone in the process.
Sure, if the goal is to assemble a class of kids who test well.
Only dishonest or ignorant people say that standardized tests only measures the ability to take standardized tests
Standardized tests are the best measure we have of cognitive ability. It predicts pretty much everything you would want to predict.
did you read the posts of people here whose kids do sailing, Equestrian, etc? Which category do you put them in?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:don't shoot the messenger. I am just taking the logic colleges use for high school courses and applying it to ECsAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are told that admissions controls for school quality by comparing the student transcript to their school profile and don't expect students to do more than is offered by the school. Why don't they do the same with ECs? No recognition for ECs not offered by the school or that cost more than a de minimus amount?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:the EC centered holistic admissions are more likely to confer advantages on the wealthyAnonymous wrote:I work in higher ed, have lived in Asia, and visit universities and high schools in China, Japan, and Vietnam annually. My opinion is that holistic admissions are imperfect, but they are a hell of a lot better than purely grade- and test-centric admissions, which corrupt not only the colleges that rely on them but also the high schools that teach to them.
The wealthy have an advantage in nearly everything, including testing and grades. We may never have a complete meritocracy, but most AOs are trained to recognize such disparities. So the kid who does a month of volunteering in Palau on his parent's dime may not have an advantage over the kid who spends 20 hours a week at a parttime job or looking after younger siblings.
That E stands for “Extra” as in outside of
+1
why would you only want ECs that are "done at the school"? So only the top kids can play Baseball or basketball --at our HS those kids are all from 1-2 "travel/elite" teams the rest of the year and they have connections to make the HS varsity team.
Or same with Dance or Gymnastics? My kid does gymnastics at competitive level, and decided to skip HS and all that entails and focus on their own training and outside school team. So they shoudlnt' be recognized for all their work? Don't kid yourself, the kids on the HS team 95%+ do outside competitive gymnastics as well. Nobody "who is poor/doesn't have the $$ for outside training" is making the HS team
It just shows how messed up this holistic system is
Umm...no you are not. You are trying to twist information.
Every single kid has the opportunity to take any of the courses a school offers. So AO look at the rigor offered at the HS and then at what the kid takes.
And the AO can tell who has money and just done ECs because parents have money versus a poor/LMC/MC kid who has to work PT and help actually pay the bills for the family, and who has to come home after school to help with siblings or grandparents/etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agreed. T20 universities and T10 lacs admit too many hooked applicants. If they are admitting over 20% QuestBridge, they should increase their class proportionally.
Nobody is admitt 20% QB. It is under 2% at most schools so just stop now.
It's commonplace now for top colleges admitting over 20% QuestBridge.
[url]https://www.questbridge.org/partners/college-partners/swarthmore-college
[/url]
24% affiliated with QuestBridge (Class of 2028)
That is a mistake on the Questbridge site. Swat took 15 QB kids in the class of 28 and 15 in the class of 27.
Could you please provide a source for this?
Do a bit of work. There is dat for almost every partner school available.
I did , and I provided the link stating 24% Swat admits are QuestBridge.
If you are serious, burden is on you to counter evidence.
Anonymous wrote:don't be daft. Many ECs are school sanctioned clubsAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are told that admissions controls for school quality by comparing the student transcript to their school profile and don't expect students to do more than is offered by the school. Why don't they do the same with ECs? No recognition for ECs not offered by the school or that cost more than a de minimus amount?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:the EC centered holistic admissions are more likely to confer advantages on the wealthyAnonymous wrote:I work in higher ed, have lived in Asia, and visit universities and high schools in China, Japan, and Vietnam annually. My opinion is that holistic admissions are imperfect, but they are a hell of a lot better than purely grade- and test-centric admissions, which corrupt not only the colleges that rely on them but also the high schools that teach to them.
The wealthy have an advantage in nearly everything, including testing and grades. We may never have a complete meritocracy, but most AOs are trained to recognize such disparities. So the kid who does a month of volunteering in Palau on his parent's dime may not have an advantage over the kid who spends 20 hours a week at a parttime job or looking after younger siblings.
That E stands for “Extra” as in outside of
Anonymous wrote:don't shoot the messenger. I am just taking the logic colleges use for high school courses and applying it to ECsAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are told that admissions controls for school quality by comparing the student transcript to their school profile and don't expect students to do more than is offered by the school. Why don't they do the same with ECs? No recognition for ECs not offered by the school or that cost more than a de minimus amount?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:the EC centered holistic admissions are more likely to confer advantages on the wealthyAnonymous wrote:I work in higher ed, have lived in Asia, and visit universities and high schools in China, Japan, and Vietnam annually. My opinion is that holistic admissions are imperfect, but they are a hell of a lot better than purely grade- and test-centric admissions, which corrupt not only the colleges that rely on them but also the high schools that teach to them.
The wealthy have an advantage in nearly everything, including testing and grades. We may never have a complete meritocracy, but most AOs are trained to recognize such disparities. So the kid who does a month of volunteering in Palau on his parent's dime may not have an advantage over the kid who spends 20 hours a week at a parttime job or looking after younger siblings.
That E stands for “Extra” as in outside of
+1
why would you only want ECs that are "done at the school"? So only the top kids can play Baseball or basketball --at our HS those kids are all from 1-2 "travel/elite" teams the rest of the year and they have connections to make the HS varsity team.
Or same with Dance or Gymnastics? My kid does gymnastics at competitive level, and decided to skip HS and all that entails and focus on their own training and outside school team. So they shoudlnt' be recognized for all their work? Don't kid yourself, the kids on the HS team 95%+ do outside competitive gymnastics as well. Nobody "who is poor/doesn't have the $$ for outside training" is making the HS team
It just shows how messed up this holistic system is
Yes but you have to start earlyAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are large numbers of kids tracked into such advanced math classes in high school? It is rarely useful career wise anymore, even in STEM fields. Plus, they have plenty of time in college to take relevant math classes.
I'll answer!!!!
My kid tracked for 2 years ahead. Took Alg 2 in 9th and Precalc in 10th. Then onto AP Calc AB in 11 and Calc BC in 12 because that's how our schools do it.
My kid went to 1 grade ahead in 1st grade. Why? Because that was just how good they were with math and math concepts. No tutoring/Kumon/pressure from us. In fact, in ES when they used to do the "timed math facts" tests, my kid was "so far behind" because they could do it all, just not super fast. They literally never missed a question---they came home in 2nd grade excited they had finally Passed a Timed math test---and I wondered how since they had just taken it. Then I went back and looked and relized they had a 100% accuracy on what they had completed, so by their logic, if they had answered enough questions, they were all correct and they finally would "pass" (Hint they were correct).
My kid understood math concepts above all but 1-2 kids even in their "advanced math" in ES. I watched it happen when helping in class and the teachers told me about it. They also told me when it came time to "advance to GT and be 2 grades ahead in 4th grade" that if my kid didn't make the cut due to a timed test, they want to advocate for them to be 2 grades ahead. (my kid made the cut). The first time my kid had to study for Math (and didn't have a 98/99% without studying) was 12th grade Calc BC.
My kid got the concepts and loved doing higher thinking math problems, but they would have been massively bored if kept on grade level or even 1 grade level ahead.
What it has allowed is my kid skipped the first year of calculus at college and now has room for 2 more advanced electives in their engineering major because of that. Same holds true for their year of chemistry credit .
This shows that anyone can do math, even kids who are naturally slow/have poor processing speed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are large numbers of kids tracked into such advanced math classes in high school? It is rarely useful career wise anymore, even in STEM fields. Plus, they have plenty of time in college to take relevant math classes.
I'll answer!!!!
My kid tracked for 2 years ahead. Took Alg 2 in 9th and Precalc in 10th. Then onto AP Calc AB in 11 and Calc BC in 12 because that's how our schools do it.
My kid went to 1 grade ahead in 1st grade. Why? Because that was just how good they were with math and math concepts. No tutoring/Kumon/pressure from us. In fact, in ES when they used to do the "timed math facts" tests, my kid was "so far behind" because they could do it all, just not super fast. They literally never missed a question---they came home in 2nd grade excited they had finally Passed a Timed math test---and I wondered how since they had just taken it. Then I went back and looked and relized they had a 100% accuracy on what they had completed, so by their logic, if they had answered enough questions, they were all correct and they finally would "pass" (Hint they were correct).
My kid understood math concepts above all but 1-2 kids even in their "advanced math" in ES. I watched it happen when helping in class and the teachers told me about it. They also told me when it came time to "advance to GT and be 2 grades ahead in 4th grade" that if my kid didn't make the cut due to a timed test, they want to advocate for them to be 2 grades ahead. (my kid made the cut). The first time my kid had to study for Math (and didn't have a 98/99% without studying) was 12th grade Calc BC.
My kid got the concepts and loved doing higher thinking math problems, but they would have been massively bored if kept on grade level or even 1 grade level ahead.
What it has allowed is my kid skipped the first year of calculus at college and now has room for 2 more advanced electives in their engineering major because of that. Same holds true for their year of chemistry credit .
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Then just rip off the bandaid and auction off slots to the highest bidder.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agreed. T20 universities and T10 lacs admit too many hooked applicants. If they are admitting over 20% QuestBridge, they should increase their class proportionally.
Nobody is admitt 20% QB. It is under 2% at most schools so just stop now.
It's commonplace now for top colleges admitting over 20% QuestBridge.
[url]https://www.questbridge.org/partners/college-partners/swarthmore-college
[/url]
24% affiliated with QuestBridge (Class of 2028)
That is a mistake on the Questbridge site. Swat took 15 QB kids in the class of 28 and 15 in the class of 27.
Don't bother with data. The people who want to blame the "undeserving" poor of darker skin colors will continue to do so, despite facts showing that legacy, donor and athletic preferences far outweigh any preferences for the poor.
Why are people bitter about donor preference? How do you think the schools got the money to cover the cost of educating FGLI?
That doesn’t work. The whole point of the current messy system is that rich kids get to imagine that they’re smart and smart kids get to imagine they’re part of the elite. It only works because they cross the streams.
It's not imagination. Smart kid at Harvard has an idea and needs rich friends at Harvard to support it. Isn't that what happened with Facebook?
So once in a generation it’s real, the other 99.9999% of the time it’s imagination. Either way, it’s the reason schools engage in this elaborate holistic scheme instead of either admitting by stats (which would exclude most of the rich kids) or auctioning off the seats (which would exclude most of the smart kids).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The College board needs to release raw scores for the AP tests. That way MIT and Cornell can see whether your 5 on Physics EM was a 98% or a 61%.
We throw away a lot of information that could be useful for everyone in the process.
Sure, if the goal is to assemble a class of kids who test well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are large numbers of kids tracked into such advanced math classes in high school? It is rarely useful career wise anymore, even in STEM fields. Plus, they have plenty of time in college to take relevant math classes.
Parental bragging rights
Anonymous wrote:don't be daft. Many ECs are school sanctioned clubsAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are told that admissions controls for school quality by comparing the student transcript to their school profile and don't expect students to do more than is offered by the school. Why don't they do the same with ECs? No recognition for ECs not offered by the school or that cost more than a de minimus amount?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:the EC centered holistic admissions are more likely to confer advantages on the wealthyAnonymous wrote:I work in higher ed, have lived in Asia, and visit universities and high schools in China, Japan, and Vietnam annually. My opinion is that holistic admissions are imperfect, but they are a hell of a lot better than purely grade- and test-centric admissions, which corrupt not only the colleges that rely on them but also the high schools that teach to them.
The wealthy have an advantage in nearly everything, including testing and grades. We may never have a complete meritocracy, but most AOs are trained to recognize such disparities. So the kid who does a month of volunteering in Palau on his parent's dime may not have an advantage over the kid who spends 20 hours a week at a parttime job or looking after younger siblings.
That E stands for “Extra” as in outside of
Anonymous wrote:Why are large numbers of kids tracked into such advanced math classes in high school? It is rarely useful career wise anymore, even in STEM fields. Plus, they have plenty of time in college to take relevant math classes.
don't shoot the messenger. I am just taking the logic colleges use for high school courses and applying it to ECsAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are told that admissions controls for school quality by comparing the student transcript to their school profile and don't expect students to do more than is offered by the school. Why don't they do the same with ECs? No recognition for ECs not offered by the school or that cost more than a de minimus amount?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:the EC centered holistic admissions are more likely to confer advantages on the wealthyAnonymous wrote:I work in higher ed, have lived in Asia, and visit universities and high schools in China, Japan, and Vietnam annually. My opinion is that holistic admissions are imperfect, but they are a hell of a lot better than purely grade- and test-centric admissions, which corrupt not only the colleges that rely on them but also the high schools that teach to them.
The wealthy have an advantage in nearly everything, including testing and grades. We may never have a complete meritocracy, but most AOs are trained to recognize such disparities. So the kid who does a month of volunteering in Palau on his parent's dime may not have an advantage over the kid who spends 20 hours a week at a parttime job or looking after younger siblings.
That E stands for “Extra” as in outside of
+1
why would you only want ECs that are "done at the school"? So only the top kids can play Baseball or basketball --at our HS those kids are all from 1-2 "travel/elite" teams the rest of the year and they have connections to make the HS varsity team.
Or same with Dance or Gymnastics? My kid does gymnastics at competitive level, and decided to skip HS and all that entails and focus on their own training and outside school team. So they shoudlnt' be recognized for all their work? Don't kid yourself, the kids on the HS team 95%+ do outside competitive gymnastics as well. Nobody "who is poor/doesn't have the $$ for outside training" is making the HS team
Anonymous wrote:it is a good question to ask. If schools only expect students to take the most rigorous classes offered by their school, why don't they apply that to ECs?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:don't be daft. Many ECs are school sanctioned clubsAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are told that admissions controls for school quality by comparing the student transcript to their school profile and don't expect students to do more than is offered by the school. Why don't they do the same with ECs? No recognition for ECs not offered by the school or that cost more than a de minimus amount?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:the EC centered holistic admissions are more likely to confer advantages on the wealthyAnonymous wrote:I work in higher ed, have lived in Asia, and visit universities and high schools in China, Japan, and Vietnam annually. My opinion is that holistic admissions are imperfect, but they are a hell of a lot better than purely grade- and test-centric admissions, which corrupt not only the colleges that rely on them but also the high schools that teach to them.
The wealthy have an advantage in nearly everything, including testing and grades. We may never have a complete meritocracy, but most AOs are trained to recognize such disparities. So the kid who does a month of volunteering in Palau on his parent's dime may not have an advantage over the kid who spends 20 hours a week at a parttime job or looking after younger siblings.
That E stands for “Extra” as in outside of
And many aren’t.Annd the posters suggests no credit for ECs. It offers by the school. That is just dim.