Anonymous wrote:You will only hear “a dime a dozen” to describe a high stats kid here on dcum. In reality there are only a couple thousand these high stats > 1550 in the real world.
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.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:as opposed to a class of kids who need remedial math at harvardAnonymous 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.
Agree. Harvard adding remedial ALGEBRA is insane. There are literally no excuses for it. Most kids finish algebra in 9th grade.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:as opposed to a class of kids who need remedial math at harvardAnonymous 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.
Agree. Harvard adding remedial ALGEBRA is insane. There are literally no excuses for it. Most kids finish algebra in 9th grade.
Anonymous wrote:its a sad reflection of "holistic" admissionsAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:as opposed to a class of kids who need remedial math at harvardAnonymous 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.
Who cares? You’re not at Harvard. Your kid isn’t at Harvard. Why do you care?
its a sad reflection of "holistic" admissionsAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:as opposed to a class of kids who need remedial math at harvardAnonymous 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.
Who cares? You’re not at Harvard. Your kid isn’t at Harvard. Why do you care?
Anonymous wrote:I prefer holistic to not holistic.
Anonymous wrote:Who is this person and why should I care what they think?
I googled them and only saw "google scholar" and some random websites come up.
Anonymous wrote:as opposed to a class of kids who need remedial math at harvardAnonymous 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:as opposed to a class of kids who need remedial math at harvardAnonymous 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.
as opposed to a class of kids who need remedial math at harvardAnonymous 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: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.