Anonymous wrote:
Test-optional adds to the uncertainty and STRESS.
This is the end result. People are not as confident they will get in, and therefore second-guess themselves, agonize and apply to more schools, which creates more work and more stress for everyone.
And as a poster said above, there aren't more seats in college. It is a zero sum game. Admissions officers taking a chance on a test-optional student WILL have to reject an academically qualified high stats student for that option!
So I disagree with the dismissive posters above regarding test-optional. Test-optional is actually the reason some students are not accepted. Literally.
Now yield protection is different: you can bypass that by demonstrating interest, and customizing your essay to make sure the college knows it isn't just a last recourse. All colleges want is a little courtesy in that regard, even though looking at stats, they are well aware they won't be the first choice. But again, customizing essays, visits and interviews are adding STRESS to the process.
So all this atmosphere leads to more stress than previously. This is not healthy or acceptable. No other country does college admissions this way, and the USA should not either!!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a basic rule in admissions, now and in the past: "If your grades are the most interesting thing about you, you're not that interesting". People want to keep denying this and talk about merit and objective measures and such, but that's how admissions people think when they look at applications. Scores are a baseline, what did you do with all those smarts? After years of looking at applications, 80% of students look like the same parent-programmed, "I checked these boxes to get into college but I don't really care about any of these things" people. Sorry, but the A minus or B student --or even just the OTHER A plus student - who did something more compelling or at least unique, is going to get the nod every time.
No, someone who can credibly simulate having done something unique well enough to survive the cursory review colleges engage in will get the nod. This vibes-based approach is even more amenable to gaming by the wealthy, sophisticated, or well-connected. We all know who is really running the non-profits “founded” by 10th graders, and it’s way easier for the wealthy to write a check to create a “unique” experience for their child than anyone else. The less legible the admissions criteria, the more it favors high SES and the connected. DEI helps URMs, so this really comes out of the hides of lower-class whites and Asian students with 1540s as opposed to 1580s.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a basic rule in admissions, now and in the past: "If your grades are the most interesting thing about you, you're not that interesting". People want to keep denying this and talk about merit and objective measures and such, but that's how admissions people think when they look at applications. Scores are a baseline, what did you do with all those smarts? After years of looking at applications, 80% of students look like the same parent-programmed, "I checked these boxes to get into college but I don't really care about any of these things" people. Sorry, but the A minus or B student --or even just the OTHER A plus student - who did something more compelling or at least unique, is going to get the nod every time.
LOL yea right WTF
Expect 15 years to do something compelling.
Getting mostly As and 1550 SAT seems very compelling.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a basic rule in admissions, now and in the past: "If your grades are the most interesting thing about you, you're not that interesting". People want to keep denying this and talk about merit and objective measures and such, but that's how admissions people think when they look at applications. Scores are a baseline, what did you do with all those smarts? After years of looking at applications, 80% of students look like the same parent-programmed, "I checked these boxes to get into college but I don't really care about any of these things" people. Sorry, but the A minus or B student --or even just the OTHER A plus student - who did something more compelling or at least unique, is going to get the nod every time.
No, someone who can credibly simulate having done something unique well enough to survive the cursory review colleges engage in will get the nod. This vibes-based approach is even more amenable to gaming by the wealthy, sophisticated, or well-connected. We all know who is really running the non-profits “founded” by 10th graders, and it’s way easier for the wealthy to write a check to create a “unique” experience for their child than anyone else. The less legible the admissions criteria, the more it favors high SES and the connected. DEI helps URMs, so this really comes out of the hides of lower-class whites and Asian students with 1540s as opposed to 1580s.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a basic rule in admissions, now and in the past: "If your grades are the most interesting thing about you, you're not that interesting". People want to keep denying this and talk about merit and objective measures and such, but that's how admissions people think when they look at applications. Scores are a baseline, what did you do with all those smarts? After years of looking at applications, 80% of students look like the same parent-programmed, "I checked these boxes to get into college but I don't really care about any of these things" people. Sorry, but the A minus or B student --or even just the OTHER A plus student - who did something more compelling or at least unique, is going to get the nod every time.
LOL yea right WTF
Expect 15 years to do something compelling.
Getting mostly As and 1550 SAT seems very compelling.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The workplace is figuring out that school brands are kind of meaningless -and testing at all levels is on the rise. My daughter is a recruiter in finance and top employers now require a LOT of testing just to get in the door, including personality, math, logic and writing assessments. You can't prep for these tests or take them over again - and there are no accommodations. Candidates (of all races and backgrounds), including the sort of "elite" credentials many DCUMers salivate over here, often bomb or don't get by the tests. Top employers want proof that the candidate is as good as they look on paper, because degrees don't prove much of anything these days.
Interesting. I hire inside counsel and we give an assignment (small legal/analytical written piece). We want to see how people think and reason and make sure they can write coherently.
And my workplace is getting rid of cover letters and sending interview questions in advance in order to accomodate poor writers and the less able to think on their feet.
Good luck - you realize you will be getting the candidates' moms, or a job coach or Googles answers a lot of the time .....your faith in humanity is laudable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good kids are getting rejected from top schools, because top schools no longer care about academic excellence as much as they care about "Diversity"
There are very few students who meet ALL of the following criteria
1) Top 1-3% of graduating class
2) 1550 in SATor 35 ACT or higher in test scores
3) National AP scholar.
4) 750 or higher in 2 Subject Tests
These are truly gifted students. All of them could easily be accommodated in the top 15 schools, many times over, but most don't get in, because top schools are obsessed with diversity.
This is a tragedy for this country in the long run, because as any economist will tell you, we are grossly misallocating some of the best resources of our academic institutions on some very questionable talent, instead of focusing them on talent that can benefit the most from them and consequently turbocharge the US economy into the next generation.
But eh. Becoming fat, dumb and careless is probably necessary for the baton to pass from the US to some other nation. That's the way history has worked
What an uninformed and troll-y post. SAT/AP test performance is not an indication of giftedness. There are means to prepare for these. Also, lots of kids fulfill this criteria.
People who enrich outside of school and/or prep for tests want them to count for more and define merit or intellect when they don't. They can certainly add to a student's application, but they shouldn't be the defining metric.
You are right, there are means to prepare. For example, you can check out the prep book from the library, for free. You know how I know? Because that is exactly what I did. I was born poor in a third world country. I studied for the SATs for 2 years and aced a test in my non-native tongue. I received a full ride from a top college. Aced it entirely based on books borrowed from my public library, for free! So please tell me again how it's inequitable, because I am a living proof that if you are motivated, nothing is impossible.
If you are a motivated person who is willing to put in hard work, that is 100% merit. SATs and grades measure exactly that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good kids are getting rejected from top schools, because top schools no longer care about academic excellence as much as they care about "Diversity"
There are very few students who meet ALL of the following criteria
1) Top 1-3% of graduating class
2) 1550 in SATor 35 ACT or higher in test scores
3) National AP scholar.
4) 750 or higher in 2 Subject Tests
These are truly gifted students. All of them could easily be accommodated in the top 15 schools, many times over, but most don't get in, because top schools are obsessed with diversity.
This is a tragedy for this country in the long run, because as any economist will tell you, we are grossly misallocating some of the best resources of our academic institutions on some very questionable talent, instead of focusing them on talent that can benefit the most from them and consequently turbocharge the US economy into the next generation.
But eh. Becoming fat, dumb and careless is probably necessary for the baton to pass from the US to some other nation. That's the way history has worked
What an uninformed and troll-y post. SAT/AP test performance is not an indication of giftedness. There are means to prepare for these. Also, lots of kids fulfill this criteria.
People who enrich outside of school and/or prep for tests want them to count for more and define merit or intellect when they don't. They can certainly add to a student's application, but they shouldn't be the defining metric.
You are right, there are means to prepare. For example, you can check out the prep book from the library, for free. You know how I know? Because that is exactly what I did. I was born poor in a third world country. I studied for the SATs for 2 years and aced a test in my non-native tongue. I received a full ride from a top college. Aced it entirely based on books borrowed from my public library, for free! So please tell me again how it's inequitable, because I am a living proof that if you are motivated, nothing is impossible.
If you are a motivated person who is willing to put in hard work, that is 100% merit. SATs and grades measure exactly that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a basic rule in admissions, now and in the past: "If your grades are the most interesting thing about you, you're not that interesting". People want to keep denying this and talk about merit and objective measures and such, but that's how admissions people think when they look at applications. Scores are a baseline, what did you do with all those smarts? After years of looking at applications, 80% of students look like the same parent-programmed, "I checked these boxes to get into college but I don't really care about any of these things" people. Sorry, but the A minus or B student --or even just the OTHER A plus student - who did something more compelling or at least unique, is going to get the nod every time.
LOL yea right WTF
Expect 15 years to do something compelling.
Getting mostly As and 1550 SAT seems very compelling.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a basic rule in admissions, now and in the past: "If your grades are the most interesting thing about you, you're not that interesting". People want to keep denying this and talk about merit and objective measures and such, but that's how admissions people think when they look at applications. Scores are a baseline, what did you do with all those smarts? After years of looking at applications, 80% of students look like the same parent-programmed, "I checked these boxes to get into college but I don't really care about any of these things" people. Sorry, but the A minus or B student --or even just the OTHER A plus student - who did something more compelling or at least unique, is going to get the nod every time.
Kids job in high school is academics first. They should have other outlets. But, come on? What did a 15-year old do with his smarts? Answer: he studied hard and got good grades and test scores. Volunteering and being kind doesn't require smarts. Having mom and dad set-up a non-profit to look good on your apps doesn't require smarts. Having paid experiences at universities in the summer is not smarts.
This 'uniqueness' crap is ridiculous. This is not an audition for an improv class or a talk show host spot---this is admission to elite universities with rigorous academics.
There is a reason the US is ranked so low in the world when it comes to education:
The top 10 countries with the best education are:
1. Germany – 0.94
2. Finland – 0.93
3. Iceland – 0.93
4. New Zealand – 0.93
5. Norway – 0.93
6. United Kingdom – 0.93
7. Australia – 0.92
8. Denmark – 0.92
9. Ireland – 0.92
10. Singapore – 0.92
https://wisevoter.com/country-rankings/education-rankings-by-country/
Colleges get to decide what they value
That's what they thought, and we are facing a Supreme Court case
Anonymous wrote:There's a basic rule in admissions, now and in the past: "If your grades are the most interesting thing about you, you're not that interesting". People want to keep denying this and talk about merit and objective measures and such, but that's how admissions people think when they look at applications. Scores are a baseline, what did you do with all those smarts? After years of looking at applications, 80% of students look like the same parent-programmed, "I checked these boxes to get into college but I don't really care about any of these things" people. Sorry, but the A minus or B student --or even just the OTHER A plus student - who did something more compelling or at least unique, is going to get the nod every time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a basic rule in admissions, now and in the past: "If your grades are the most interesting thing about you, you're not that interesting". People want to keep denying this and talk about merit and objective measures and such, but that's how admissions people think when they look at applications. Scores are a baseline, what did you do with all those smarts? After years of looking at applications, 80% of students look like the same parent-programmed, "I checked these boxes to get into college but I don't really care about any of these things" people. Sorry, but the A minus or B student --or even just the OTHER A plus student - who did something more compelling or at least unique, is going to get the nod every time.
Kids job in high school is academics first. They should have other outlets. But, come on? What did a 15-year old do with his smarts? Answer: he studied hard and got good grades and test scores. Volunteering and being kind doesn't require smarts. Having mom and dad set-up a non-profit to look good on your apps doesn't require smarts. Having paid experiences at universities in the summer is not smarts.
This 'uniqueness' crap is ridiculous. This is not an audition for an improv class or a talk show host spot---this is admission to elite universities with rigorous academics.
There is a reason the US is ranked so low in the world when it comes to education:
The top 10 countries with the best education are:
1. Germany – 0.94
2. Finland – 0.93
3. Iceland – 0.93
4. New Zealand – 0.93
5. Norway – 0.93
6. United Kingdom – 0.93
7. Australia – 0.92
8. Denmark – 0.92
9. Ireland – 0.92
10. Singapore – 0.92
https://wisevoter.com/country-rankings/education-rankings-by-country/
Maybe in the countries you listed where kids aren’t distracting by having to save for their own college tuition, at risk of eviction, in violent neighborhoods, etc.
No, but education works differently in those countries. For example, Germany tracks all students starting around age 10. You can move between the tracks but it’s not that common. They also force all immigrants to pass a German language test before joining schools in Germany.
Finland has no racial diversity and the kids all come to school reading and writing at age 7 by the time they start school. Schools don’t need to do any parenting because the actual parents do that.
The “actual parents” are healthy & employed with easy access to healthcare, nutrition meals, housing and childcare. Shockingly, that makes a difference!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a basic rule in admissions, now and in the past: "If your grades are the most interesting thing about you, you're not that interesting". People want to keep denying this and talk about merit and objective measures and such, but that's how admissions people think when they look at applications. Scores are a baseline, what did you do with all those smarts? After years of looking at applications, 80% of students look like the same parent-programmed, "I checked these boxes to get into college but I don't really care about any of these things" people. Sorry, but the A minus or B student --or even just the OTHER A plus student - who did something more compelling or at least unique, is going to get the nod every time.
Kids job in high school is academics first. They should have other outlets. But, come on? What did a 15-year old do with his smarts? Answer: he studied hard and got good grades and test scores. Volunteering and being kind doesn't require smarts. Having mom and dad set-up a non-profit to look good on your apps doesn't require smarts. Having paid experiences at universities in the summer is not smarts.
This 'uniqueness' crap is ridiculous. This is not an audition for an improv class or a talk show host spot---this is admission to elite universities with rigorous academics.
There is a reason the US is ranked so low in the world when it comes to education:
The top 10 countries with the best education are:
1. Germany – 0.94
2. Finland – 0.93
3. Iceland – 0.93
4. New Zealand – 0.93
5. Norway – 0.93
6. United Kingdom – 0.93
7. Australia – 0.92
8. Denmark – 0.92
9. Ireland – 0.92
10. Singapore – 0.92
https://wisevoter.com/country-rankings/education-rankings-by-country/
Maybe in the countries you listed where kids aren’t distracting by having to save for their own college tuition, at risk of eviction, in violent neighborhoods, etc.
No, but education works differently in those countries. For example, Germany tracks all students starting around age 10. You can move between the tracks but it’s not that common. They also force all immigrants to pass a German language test before joining schools in Germany.
Finland has no racial diversity and the kids all come to school reading and writing at age 7 by the time they start school. Schools don’t need to do any parenting because the actual parents do that.