Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you shoot for top 10, absolutely go TO if SAT < 1550.
Gosh.. really? How did my kid's 1540 get them into MIT?
Anonymous wrote:I have a current Senior.
He's my firstborn, so I listened to A LOT of talks by AOs and advisors.
This is what was the conclusion amongst them:
If you are from a wealthy area/good school district: they expect to see scores.
If you have a high GPA and no scores: they proceed with caution.
I heard several times in these talks: who isn't submitting a 35 ACT or 1500+ SAT. (this was primarily for T1-25 schools).
Anonymous wrote:If you shoot for top 10, absolutely go TO if SAT < 1550.
Anonymous wrote:I’m the PP who is remembering or misremembering the conversation. The (possibly apocryphal) convo stuck with me bc due to some health issues and hospitalization, my own kid had a GPA that, relative to her scores, was on the low side, and that’s apparently atypical.
Just did some searching and PPs are correct that Lee Coffin has said Dartmouth values scores, bc scores + grades give the fullest picture. (Maybe it wasn’t him?)
If someone remembers what I’m remembering, I’d love to know. Otherwise all should ignore my comment bc I really can’t back it up.
Anonymous wrote:I’m the PP who is remembering or misremembering the conversation. The (possibly apocryphal) convo stuck with me bc due to some health issues and hospitalization, my own kid had a GPA that, relative to her scores, was on the low side, and that’s apparently atypical.
Just did some searching and PPs are correct that Lee Coffin has said Dartmouth values scores, bc scores + grades give the fullest picture. (Maybe it wasn’t him?)
If someone remembers what I’m remembering, I’d love to know. Otherwise all should ignore my comment bc I really can’t back it up.
Anonymous wrote:I swear I heard the Dartmouth guy (Lee coffin?) saying that when, after admissions cycle ended, they solicited from College Board the scores for TO applicants who had taken the test, and saw a clear linear correlation between test scores and GPA. Very rarely did they diverge, so the SATs only backed up why they were already seeing without the scores. Did anyone else hear that conversation? Am I misremembering? Might have been on Your College Bound Kid. Maybe 4-5 months ago?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I swear I heard the Dartmouth guy (Lee coffin?) saying that when, after admissions cycle ended, they solicited from College Board the scores for TO applicants who had taken the test, and saw a clear linear correlation between test scores and GPA. Very rarely did they diverge, so the SATs only backed up why they were already seeing without the scores. Did anyone else hear that conversation? Am I misremembering? Might have been on Your College Bound Kid. Maybe 4-5 months ago?
+1 Not sure if it was on YCBK or Dartmouth's podcast. I think the confusion is that he had a similar discussion with the AO from Yale.
Just to clarify, he was speaking within the context of test optional and academic performance at Dartmouth. He said a few things of relevance to this discussion:
1) last academic year, Dartmouth had the highest number of students on academic probation, which he attributed to TO.
2) Students should submit scores, even if they are within the 25-50th percentile because their research shows that the scores validate the GPAs. Also, students at under-resourced schools should also submit scores even if the scores are under 25th percentile because it could validate the grades. He implied that Dartmouth has the data to determine the cutoff score to succeed at Dartmouth, e.g., 1300.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I swear I heard the Dartmouth guy (Lee coffin?) saying that when, after admissions cycle ended, they solicited from College Board the scores for TO applicants who had taken the test, and saw a clear linear correlation between test scores and GPA. Very rarely did they diverge, so the SATs only backed up why they were already seeing without the scores. Did anyone else hear that conversation? Am I misremembering? Might have been on Your College Bound Kid. Maybe 4-5 months ago?
This doesn't make any sense. Assumably the test optional matriculants had high GPAs. And that Dartmouth subsequently learned that they also had high SAT scores that they just didn't submit?
Why would these kids have not submitted their high scores?
None of this makes sense.
Anonymous wrote:I swear I heard the Dartmouth guy (Lee coffin?) saying that when, after admissions cycle ended, they solicited from College Board the scores for TO applicants who had taken the test, and saw a clear linear correlation between test scores and GPA. Very rarely did they diverge, so the SATs only backed up why they were already seeing without the scores. Did anyone else hear that conversation? Am I misremembering? Might have been on Your College Bound Kid. Maybe 4-5 months ago?
Anonymous wrote:I swear I heard the Dartmouth guy (Lee coffin?) saying that when, after admissions cycle ended, they solicited from College Board the scores for TO applicants who had taken the test, and saw a clear linear correlation between test scores and GPA. Very rarely did they diverge, so the SATs only backed up why they were already seeing without the scores. Did anyone else hear that conversation? Am I misremembering? Might have been on Your College Bound Kid. Maybe 4-5 months ago?
Anonymous wrote:I swear I heard the Dartmouth guy (Lee coffin?) saying that when, after admissions cycle ended, they solicited from College Board the scores for TO applicants who had taken the test, and saw a clear linear correlation between test scores and GPA. Very rarely did they diverge, so the SATs only backed up why they were already seeing without the scores. Did anyone else hear that conversation? Am I misremembering? Might have been on Your College Bound Kid. Maybe 4-5 months ago?