Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Holistic admissions is the problem. Admit high stat test takers only and you won’t need remedial classes in T20 schools.
I disagree. First, test taking ability is not the only indicator of success and second, how do you distinguish between all of the 1580-1600s?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fewer kids regularly read or write for pleasure, and I'd imagine that explains some of it. Independent reading lends itself to a greater range of general knowledge, better critical thinking skills, a larger vocabulary, and better language and communication skills.
+100
I have a college Freshmen at an Ivy and he reads all of the time—always has. Recently we were in a waiting room together and adults kept commenting they were so impressed he was reading an actual book while waiting. He reads a lot of non-fiction, history, Russian lit, and he had to read a ton of novels in HS. I 100% think that’s why he scored so high on standardized tests and is excelling in courses- already won an award this year w/ $ attached. When he was home over break- he was reading —my dad was a voracious reading and when he passed away he took a lot of his books.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fewer kids regularly read or write for pleasure, and I'd imagine that explains some of it. Independent reading lends itself to a greater range of general knowledge, better critical thinking skills, a larger vocabulary, and better language and communication skills.
+100
I have a college Freshmen at an Ivy and he reads all of the time—always has. Recently we were in a waiting room together and adults kept commenting they were so impressed he was reading an actual book while waiting. He reads a lot of non-fiction, history, Russian lit, and he had to read a ton of novels in HS. I 100% think that’s why he scored so high on standardized tests and is excelling in courses- already won an award this year w/ $ attached. When he was home over break- he was reading —my dad was a voracious reading and when he passed away he took a lot of his books.
Anonymous wrote:Someone beat me to it: rampant cheating your way to the top, and pricey admissions counseling and test prep obscuring innate ability.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Big population of private school, parochial school, International students and some top feeder publics at the Ivies/T10/15/20s.
^ they aren’t the ones in remedial anything. My kid was more than prepared
Anonymous wrote:Fewer kids regularly read or write for pleasure, and I'd imagine that explains some of it. Independent reading lends itself to a greater range of general knowledge, better critical thinking skills, a larger vocabulary, and better language and communication skills.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ok can someone please square the circle
Schools are harder to get into than ever before yet we are hearing from faculty that there is a crisis of basic competence in the student body.
What is going on?
IT's simple---those applying to T25 schools are not the same ones who are "in a crisis of basic competence"
A kid can get into Harvard, despite the fact 40% of their HS class will not graduate/barely graduate and 60% won't even go to college. One has nothing to do with the other
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Holistic admissions is the problem. Admit high stat test takers only and you won’t need remedial classes in T20 schools.
I disagree. First, test taking ability is not the only indicator of success and second, how do you distinguish between all of the 1580-1600s?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ok can someone please square the circle
Schools are harder to get into than ever before yet we are hearing from faculty that there is a crisis of basic competence in the student body.
What is going on?
IT's simple---those applying to T25 schools are not the same ones who are "in a crisis of basic competence"
A kid can get into Harvard, despite the fact 40% of their HS class will not graduate/barely graduate and 60% won't even go to college. One has nothing to do with the other
No, I mean specifically faculty at t20s who say that there is a crisis of competence with their undergrads these days
Not the general unwashed population
Because when it is lower across the board, both can be true.
Anonymous wrote:grade inflation
test optional
vague, subjective scoring of essays and ECs
holistic admission
yield algorithms
Anonymous wrote:Ok can someone please square the circle
Schools are harder to get into than ever before yet we are hearing from faculty that there is a crisis of basic competence in the student body.
What is going on?