Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Puppetry or playing the mandolin?
Are those skills not dependent on parents income level?
Political activity? At 17 the kids just regurgitate their parents beliefs, no indepent thinking there
Well, my DC definitely does not regurgitate my political beliefs. And puppetry and mandolin were examples I pulled out of the air, but really, there are plenty of parents in this area who can't afford private school/expensive "service" trips/SAT tutors/travel soccer, but they can afford a friggin' mandolin. Or pen and paper for writing. Or . . . whatever. You don't have to be wealthy to have an unusual interest.
), but I imagine their reaction will be, "awww, her mother loves her!" To get into a competitive college you need to excel at something that's juried or peer-reviewed - you get selected by your youth orchestra to solo in front of a large audience, you win a national writing competition, your classmates elect you president of student government or some club, you are nationally ranked in some sport. Some of this is free (getting yourself elected, entering writing competitions), but other things (music lessons, coaches) can cost major bucks.Anonymous wrote:Puppetry or playing the mandolin?
Are those skills not dependent on parents income level?
Political activity? At 17 the kids just regurgitate their parents beliefs, no indepent thinking there
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As long as you also start fining/jailing admissions people for giving weight to legacy/donor/connected kids. Not sure how I feel about keeping preferences for athletes, I could go either way on that one.
Jailing admissions people? Seriously?
Anonymous wrote:As long as you also start fining/jailing admissions people for giving weight to legacy/donor/connected kids. Not sure how I feel about keeping preferences for athletes, I could go either way on that one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are no objective criteria for admission to these schools which is why I suspect plaintiffs will lose. If they could actually prove quotas, say that there is a cap on Asians, that would be one thing. But I highly doubt thats what is going on. And its not as if Asians are underrepresented compared to their percentage in the general population. If anything, they are overrepresented. So the claim comes down to "we are more qualified than people who got in" which isn't going to go anywhere because there is no way to measure who is qualified. I suspect these schools would prefer original thinkers over kids who have been packaged all their lives and get the grades/scores. There are several such kids at my daughter's school, and they do very well academically and participate in all the extra-curricular activities their parents have told them will help them get into an Ivy. There are a bazillion kids like that out there and probably most don't get into the top Ivies.
I guess I resent this sense of entitlement -- my child deserve to be admitted because of her scores and grades and that other child doesn't. That other child may just be a lot more interesting.
How do you define interesting? Other than being homeless, the most "interesting" entries on a kid's resume costs the parents big money, such as volunteering overseas.... Middle class families can not compete with upper class families.
Anonymous wrote:There are no objective criteria for admission to these schools which is why I suspect plaintiffs will lose. If they could actually prove quotas, say that there is a cap on Asians, that would be one thing. But I highly doubt thats what is going on. And its not as if Asians are underrepresented compared to their percentage in the general population. If anything, they are overrepresented. So the claim comes down to "we are more qualified than people who got in" which isn't going to go anywhere because there is no way to measure who is qualified. I suspect these schools would prefer original thinkers over kids who have been packaged all their lives and get the grades/scores. There are several such kids at my daughter's school, and they do very well academically and participate in all the extra-curricular activities their parents have told them will help them get into an Ivy. There are a bazillion kids like that out there and probably most don't get into the top Ivies.
I guess I resent this sense of entitlement -- my child deserve to be admitted because of her scores and grades and that other child doesn't. That other child may just be a lot more interesting.
Anonymous wrote:There are no objective criteria for admission to these schools which is why I suspect plaintiffs will lose. If they could actually prove quotas, say that there is a cap on Asians, that would be one thing. But I highly doubt thats what is going on. And its not as if Asians are underrepresented compared to their percentage in the general population. If anything, they are overrepresented. So the claim comes down to "we are more qualified than people who got in" which isn't going to go anywhere because there is no way to measure who is qualified. I suspect these schools would prefer original thinkers over kids who have been packaged all their lives and get the grades/scores. There are several such kids at my daughter's school, and they do very well academically and participate in all the extra-curricular activities their parents have told them will help them get into an Ivy. There are a bazillion kids like that out there and probably most don't get into the top Ivies.
I guess I resent this sense of entitlement -- my child deserve to be admitted because of her scores and grades and that other child doesn't. That other child may just be a lot more interesting.