Anonymous wrote:Senior AA daughter who I guess isn't remotely qualified either with an unweighted 3.95, local private school also. 35 ACT. Her posse possesses similar stats. We'll have to see how her 'remotely unqualified' stats are reviewed by the nine colleges she's applying to.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If race is the predominant factor, can anyone tell me why minorities are not the majority in HYP and others and representation is usually in the low percentage?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Young, Gifted, and Not Getting Into Harvard" means one thing for sure...
The kid is Asian or White.
That is just complete bullshit. I think people who make statements like this must have a very shaky grasp of basic math. There are THOUSANDS of gifted students nationwide. Harvard only accepts about 1900 of them each year.
yes, but who are they accepting -- and what edge do THEY have. My guess is race/ethnicity is definitely a factor.
Even if you were to fill every seat with white and Asian students with perfect gpa and test scores (disregarding other holistic factors), there would still be arguments over qualifications. The best university in Shanghai has to turn away thousands of students from the SAME ethnic group. So what would the rational argument be? I would think so many qualified students and just not enough seats.
I am a proponent of holistic admissions but I also realize that no premier college is going to admit someone who can't do the work. HYP (not the only game in town) is not going to risk their reputation of being academic powerhouses by admitting subpar students who can't handle the work.
There just aren't enough seats for everyone wanting HYP et al but with over 3000 colleges, there ARE seats available.
Because there aren't that many black students that are even remotely qualified to be at Ivy League schools. They give URMs big boosts, but even with that there just aren't that many who are close to Ivy League caliber.
This isn't for the Ivy League, but it's relevant WRT affirmative action: https://www.nas.org/images/documents/report_affirmative_action_at_three_universities.pdf
From the report: "The odds ratio for blacks compared to whites at NCS is 13 to 1, but at UVA it is 106 to 1 and at William &Mary 267 to 1. In other words, at UVA the odds of a black student being admitted is more than 100 times the odds of admission of a white student with the same qualifications. The odds of admitting a black applicant at William & Mary is more than 250 times the odds of admitting an equally-qualified white applicant."
It's interesting that as the university gets more selective, the odds ratio increases. I'd be very interested to see what it was at Harvard.
AA daughter at Harvard with 3.96 unweighted GPA from local private and 2380 SATs. Probably not remotely qualified, but carrying a 3.95 in college as a math major. Fact.
Anonymous wrote:I realize that this thread was originally about Harvard, but this is obviously not representative of a typical college student.
Most white people attending Harvard are from, at a minimum, upper-middle class backgrounds, with parents that both have degrees from very good schools. This is NOT typical of white people (or asians).
Legacies hurt everyone except for well-off white people. Lower-middle class, working class and poor white people don't have this advantage and are typically hurt by affirmative action programs because they lack financial advantages that are often incorrectly attributed to them, while still being forced to defer to other races.
Anonymous wrote:I was merely curious so I went to the Harvard admissions page for the Class of 2020 and compared to US census information for 2015. Stats below are % of Harvard students compared to national %.
African American: 13.7% versus 13.3%
Asian American: 22.1% versus 5.6%
Hispanic or Latino: 12.6% versus 17.6%
Native American or Pacific Islander: 2.6% versus 1.4% (combine NA and PIslanders in the census).
*Harvard did not state what % was white, but let's assume it's the remainder: 49%, versus 77.1%
Source: https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/table/PST045215/00
https://college.harvard.edu/admissions/admissions-statistics
Judging from the above it seems that Harvard has done an excellent (and most likely deliberate) job of keeping the AA population comparable to the national average. The under-representation of whites at Harvard is probably due to Asian Americans.
Note: the following article from JPost states that Harvard's undergraduate is 25% Jewish, compared to 2.2% of the American population.
http://www.jpost.com/Diaspora/The-most-heavily-Jewish-US-college-and-other-facts-about-Jews-at-American-colleges-437701
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/01/us/poll-shows-major-shift-in-identity-of-us-jews.html
Jews are for all practical purposes white with the exception of a tiny handful (I am Jewish FYI), so it doesn't take much to realize that no more than 25% of Harvard's students are from white American backgrounds of Christian heritage, which means that this group is substantially underrepresented. And likely by a higher margin given that Harvard admissions link states 11.4% of the students are international, meaning it's likely white Americans of Christian heritage are around 15% of Harvard student body. The most overrepresented demographics at Harvard are Jews, followed by Asians. The most underrepresented are basically the WASPs.
Just putting this out. It's interesting. Provides fuel for everyone who's posted on this thread.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If race is the predominant factor, can anyone tell me why minorities are not the majority in HYP and others and representation is usually in the low percentage?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Young, Gifted, and Not Getting Into Harvard" means one thing for sure...
The kid is Asian or White.
That is just complete bullshit. I think people who make statements like this must have a very shaky grasp of basic math. There are THOUSANDS of gifted students nationwide. Harvard only accepts about 1900 of them each year.
yes, but who are they accepting -- and what edge do THEY have. My guess is race/ethnicity is definitely a factor.
Even if you were to fill every seat with white and Asian students with perfect gpa and test scores (disregarding other holistic factors), there would still be arguments over qualifications. The best university in Shanghai has to turn away thousands of students from the SAME ethnic group. So what would the rational argument be? I would think so many qualified students and just not enough seats.
I am a proponent of holistic admissions but I also realize that no premier college is going to admit someone who can't do the work. HYP (not the only game in town) is not going to risk their reputation of being academic powerhouses by admitting subpar students who can't handle the work.
There just aren't enough seats for everyone wanting HYP et al but with over 3000 colleges, there ARE seats available.
Because there aren't that many black students that are even remotely qualified to be at Ivy League schools. They give URMs big boosts, but even with that there just aren't that many who are close to Ivy League caliber.
This isn't for the Ivy League, but it's relevant WRT affirmative action: https://www.nas.org/images/documents/report_affirmative_action_at_three_universities.pdf
From the report: "The odds ratio for blacks compared to whites at NCS is 13 to 1, but at UVA it is 106 to 1 and at William &Mary 267 to 1. In other words, at UVA the odds of a black student being admitted is more than 100 times the odds of admission of a white student with the same qualifications. The odds of admitting a black applicant at William & Mary is more than 250 times the odds of admitting an equally-qualified white applicant."
It's interesting that as the university gets more selective, the odds ratio increases. I'd be very interested to see what it was at Harvard.
AA daughter at Harvard with 3.96 unweighted GPA from local private and 2380 SATs. Probably not remotely qualified, but carrying a 3.95 in college as a math major. Fact.
Senior AA daughter who I guess isn't remotely qualified either with an unweighted 3.95, local private school also. 35 ACT. Her posse possesses similar stats. We'll have to see how her 'remotely unqualified' stats are reviewed by the nine colleges she's applying to.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If race is the predominant factor, can anyone tell me why minorities are not the majority in HYP and others and representation is usually in the low percentage?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Young, Gifted, and Not Getting Into Harvard" means one thing for sure...
The kid is Asian or White.
That is just complete bullshit. I think people who make statements like this must have a very shaky grasp of basic math. There are THOUSANDS of gifted students nationwide. Harvard only accepts about 1900 of them each year.
yes, but who are they accepting -- and what edge do THEY have. My guess is race/ethnicity is definitely a factor.
Even if you were to fill every seat with white and Asian students with perfect gpa and test scores (disregarding other holistic factors), there would still be arguments over qualifications. The best university in Shanghai has to turn away thousands of students from the SAME ethnic group. So what would the rational argument be? I would think so many qualified students and just not enough seats.
I am a proponent of holistic admissions but I also realize that no premier college is going to admit someone who can't do the work. HYP (not the only game in town) is not going to risk their reputation of being academic powerhouses by admitting subpar students who can't handle the work.
There just aren't enough seats for everyone wanting HYP et al but with over 3000 colleges, there ARE seats available.
Because there aren't that many black students that are even remotely qualified to be at Ivy League schools. They give URMs big boosts, but even with that there just aren't that many who are close to Ivy League caliber.
This isn't for the Ivy League, but it's relevant WRT affirmative action: https://www.nas.org/images/documents/report_affirmative_action_at_three_universities.pdf
From the report: "The odds ratio for blacks compared to whites at NCS is 13 to 1, but at UVA it is 106 to 1 and at William &Mary 267 to 1. In other words, at UVA the odds of a black student being admitted is more than 100 times the odds of admission of a white student with the same qualifications. The odds of admitting a black applicant at William & Mary is more than 250 times the odds of admitting an equally-qualified white applicant."
It's interesting that as the university gets more selective, the odds ratio increases. I'd be very interested to see what it was at Harvard.
AA daughter at Harvard with 3.96 unweighted GPA from local private and 2380 SATs. Probably not remotely qualified, but carrying a 3.95 in college as a math major. Fact.
+1Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If race is the predominant factor, can anyone tell me why minorities are not the majority in HYP and others and representation is usually in the low percentage?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Young, Gifted, and Not Getting Into Harvard" means one thing for sure...
The kid is Asian or White.
That is just complete bullshit. I think people who make statements like this must have a very shaky grasp of basic math. There are THOUSANDS of gifted students nationwide. Harvard only accepts about 1900 of them each year.
yes, but who are they accepting -- and what edge do THEY have. My guess is race/ethnicity is definitely a factor.
Even if you were to fill every seat with white and Asian students with perfect gpa and test scores (disregarding other holistic factors), there would still be arguments over qualifications. The best university in Shanghai has to turn away thousands of students from the SAME ethnic group. So what would the rational argument be? I would think so many qualified students and just not enough seats.
I am a proponent of holistic admissions but I also realize that no premier college is going to admit someone who can't do the work. HYP (not the only game in town) is not going to risk their reputation of being academic powerhouses by admitting subpar students who can't handle the work.
There just aren't enough seats for everyone wanting HYP et al but with over 3000 colleges, there ARE seats available.
Because there aren't that many black students that are even remotely qualified to be at Ivy League schools. They give URMs big boosts, but even with that there just aren't that many who are close to Ivy League caliber.
This isn't for the Ivy League, but it's relevant WRT affirmative action: https://www.nas.org/images/documents/report_affirmative_action_at_three_universities.pdf
From the report: "The odds ratio for blacks compared to whites at NCS is 13 to 1, but at UVA it is 106 to 1 and at William &Mary 267 to 1. In other words, at UVA the odds of a black student being admitted is more than 100 times the odds of admission of a white student with the same qualifications. The odds of admitting a black applicant at William & Mary is more than 250 times the odds of admitting an equally-qualified white applicant."
It's interesting that as the university gets more selective, the odds ratio increases. I'd be very interested to see what it was at Harvard.
As a parent of a black ivy league student student, I am not sure what point you are making. My kid graduated from a well known local private with about 20 other black students. I think 7 or 8 are now in Ivy League colleges or at Stanford. I think my son is pretty typical: high GPA, near perfect SAT, won international fellowship, etc. Doing well acdemicallly at college and has made black and white friends at school. No major differnces between the kids that I can perceive. All very bright, and fascinating people. One friend is a third generation legacy. This kid is brilliant and funny. My point is if you sepnd time with kids at an ivy they are uniformally impressive young people regardless of their race, legacy status, etc. And so are many of the kids who didn't get it.
I would think if it was statistically 'easier' to be accepted, the percentage of African-Americans with high comparable stats would be higher than the 4-7% range which is well below the percentages for other groups.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If race is the predominant factor, can anyone tell me why minorities are not the majority in HYP and others and representation is usually in the low percentage?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Young, Gifted, and Not Getting Into Harvard" means one thing for sure...
The kid is Asian or White.
That is just complete bullshit. I think people who make statements like this must have a very shaky grasp of basic math. There are THOUSANDS of gifted students nationwide. Harvard only accepts about 1900 of them each year.
yes, but who are they accepting -- and what edge do THEY have. My guess is race/ethnicity is definitely a factor.
Even if you were to fill every seat with white and Asian students with perfect gpa and test scores (disregarding other holistic factors), there would still be arguments over qualifications. The best university in Shanghai has to turn away thousands of students from the SAME ethnic group. So what would the rational argument be? I would think so many qualified students and just not enough seats.
I am a proponent of holistic admissions but I also realize that no premier college is going to admit someone who can't do the work. HYP (not the only game in town) is not going to risk their reputation of being academic powerhouses by admitting subpar students who can't handle the work.
There just aren't enough seats for everyone wanting HYP et al but with over 3000 colleges, there ARE seats available.
Because there aren't that many black students that are even remotely qualified to be at Ivy League schools. They give URMs big boosts, but even with that there just aren't that many who are close to Ivy League caliber.
This isn't for the Ivy League, but it's relevant WRT affirmative action: https://www.nas.org/images/documents/report_affirmative_action_at_three_universities.pdf
From the report: "The odds ratio for blacks compared to whites at NCS is 13 to 1, but at UVA it is 106 to 1 and at William &Mary 267 to 1. In other words, at UVA the odds of a black student being admitted is more than 100 times the odds of admission of a white student with the same qualifications. The odds of admitting a black applicant at William & Mary is more than 250 times the odds of admitting an equally-qualified white applicant."
It's interesting that as the university gets more selective, the odds ratio increases. I'd be very interested to see what it was at Harvard.
As a parent of a black ivy league student student, I am not sure what point you are making. My kid graduated from a well known local private with about 20 other black students. I think 7 or 8 are now in Ivy League colleges or at Stanford. I think my son is pretty typical: high GPA, near perfect SAT, won international fellowship, etc. Doing well acdemicallly at college and has made black and white friends at school. No major differnces between the kids that I can perceive. All very bright, and fascinating people. One friend is a third generation legacy. This kid is brilliant and funny. My point is if you sepnd time with kids at an ivy they are uniformally impressive young people regardless of their race, legacy status, etc. And so are many of the kids who didn't get it.
Having attended 2 Ivies, I agree with your statement. There are equally impressive kids of all backgrounds. I think what the previous pp was trying to show was that given the same set of qualifications, it is statistically easier for kids of certain races to be accepted.
You do know that the number of white kids that are not even remotely qualified for HYP is greater than the number of African-American kids. Simple math.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If race is the predominant factor, can anyone tell me why minorities are not the majority in HYP and others and representation is usually in the low percentage?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Young, Gifted, and Not Getting Into Harvard" means one thing for sure...
The kid is Asian or White.
That is just complete bullshit. I think people who make statements like this must have a very shaky grasp of basic math. There are THOUSANDS of gifted students nationwide. Harvard only accepts about 1900 of them each year.
yes, but who are they accepting -- and what edge do THEY have. My guess is race/ethnicity is definitely a factor.
Even if you were to fill every seat with white and Asian students with perfect gpa and test scores (disregarding other holistic factors), there would still be arguments over qualifications. The best university in Shanghai has to turn away thousands of students from the SAME ethnic group. So what would the rational argument be? I would think so many qualified students and just not enough seats.
I am a proponent of holistic admissions but I also realize that no premier college is going to admit someone who can't do the work. HYP (not the only game in town) is not going to risk their reputation of being academic powerhouses by admitting subpar students who can't handle the work.
There just aren't enough seats for everyone wanting HYP et al but with over 3000 colleges, there ARE seats available.
Because there aren't that many black students that are even remotely qualified to be at Ivy League schools. They give URMs big boosts, but even with that there just aren't that many who are close to Ivy League caliber.
This isn't for the Ivy League, but it's relevant WRT affirmative action: https://www.nas.org/images/documents/report_affirmative_action_at_three_universities.pdf
From the report: "The odds ratio for blacks compared to whites at NCS is 13 to 1, but at UVA it is 106 to 1 and at William &Mary 267 to 1. In other words, at UVA the odds of a black student being admitted is more than 100 times the odds of admission of a white student with the same qualifications. The odds of admitting a black applicant at William & Mary is more than 250 times the odds of admitting an equally-qualified white applicant."
It's interesting that as the university gets more selective, the odds ratio increases. I'd be very interested to see what it was at Harvard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If race is the predominant factor, can anyone tell me why minorities are not the majority in HYP and others and representation is usually in the low percentage?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Young, Gifted, and Not Getting Into Harvard" means one thing for sure...
The kid is Asian or White.
That is just complete bullshit. I think people who make statements like this must have a very shaky grasp of basic math. There are THOUSANDS of gifted students nationwide. Harvard only accepts about 1900 of them each year.
yes, but who are they accepting -- and what edge do THEY have. My guess is race/ethnicity is definitely a factor.
Even if you were to fill every seat with white and Asian students with perfect gpa and test scores (disregarding other holistic factors), there would still be arguments over qualifications. The best university in Shanghai has to turn away thousands of students from the SAME ethnic group. So what would the rational argument be? I would think so many qualified students and just not enough seats.
I am a proponent of holistic admissions but I also realize that no premier college is going to admit someone who can't do the work. HYP (not the only game in town) is not going to risk their reputation of being academic powerhouses by admitting subpar students who can't handle the work.
There just aren't enough seats for everyone wanting HYP et al but with over 3000 colleges, there ARE seats available.
Because there aren't that many black students that are even remotely qualified to be at Ivy League schools. They give URMs big boosts, but even with that there just aren't that many who are close to Ivy League caliber.
This isn't for the Ivy League, but it's relevant WRT affirmative action: https://www.nas.org/images/documents/report_affirmative_action_at_three_universities.pdf
From the report: "The odds ratio for blacks compared to whites at NCS is 13 to 1, but at UVA it is 106 to 1 and at William &Mary 267 to 1. In other words, at UVA the odds of a black student being admitted is more than 100 times the odds of admission of a white student with the same qualifications. The odds of admitting a black applicant at William & Mary is more than 250 times the odds of admitting an equally-qualified white applicant."
It's interesting that as the university gets more selective, the odds ratio increases. I'd be very interested to see what it was at Harvard.
As a parent of a black ivy league student student, I am not sure what point you are making. My kid graduated from a well known local private with about 20 other black students. I think 7 or 8 are now in Ivy League colleges or at Stanford. I think my son is pretty typical: high GPA, near perfect SAT, won international fellowship, etc. Doing well acdemicallly at college and has made black and white friends at school. No major differnces between the kids that I can perceive. All very bright, and fascinating people. One friend is a third generation legacy. This kid is brilliant and funny. My point is if you sepnd time with kids at an ivy they are uniformally impressive young people regardless of their race, legacy status, etc. And so are many of the kids who didn't get it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If race is the predominant factor, can anyone tell me why minorities are not the majority in HYP and others and representation is usually in the low percentage?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Young, Gifted, and Not Getting Into Harvard" means one thing for sure...
The kid is Asian or White.
That is just complete bullshit. I think people who make statements like this must have a very shaky grasp of basic math. There are THOUSANDS of gifted students nationwide. Harvard only accepts about 1900 of them each year.
yes, but who are they accepting -- and what edge do THEY have. My guess is race/ethnicity is definitely a factor.
Even if you were to fill every seat with white and Asian students with perfect gpa and test scores (disregarding other holistic factors), there would still be arguments over qualifications. The best university in Shanghai has to turn away thousands of students from the SAME ethnic group. So what would the rational argument be? I would think so many qualified students and just not enough seats.
I am a proponent of holistic admissions but I also realize that no premier college is going to admit someone who can't do the work. HYP (not the only game in town) is not going to risk their reputation of being academic powerhouses by admitting subpar students who can't handle the work.
There just aren't enough seats for everyone wanting HYP et al but with over 3000 colleges, there ARE seats available.
Because there aren't that many black students that are even remotely qualified to be at Ivy League schools. They give URMs big boosts, but even with that there just aren't that many who are close to Ivy League caliber.
This isn't for the Ivy League, but it's relevant WRT affirmative action: https://www.nas.org/images/documents/report_affirmative_action_at_three_universities.pdf
From the report: "The odds ratio for blacks compared to whites at NCS is 13 to 1, but at UVA it is 106 to 1 and at William &Mary 267 to 1. In other words, at UVA the odds of a black student being admitted is more than 100 times the odds of admission of a white student with the same qualifications. The odds of admitting a black applicant at William & Mary is more than 250 times the odds of admitting an equally-qualified white applicant."
It's interesting that as the university gets more selective, the odds ratio increases. I'd be very interested to see what it was at Harvard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If race is the predominant factor, can anyone tell me why minorities are not the majority in HYP and others and representation is usually in the low percentage?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Young, Gifted, and Not Getting Into Harvard" means one thing for sure...
The kid is Asian or White.
That is just complete bullshit. I think people who make statements like this must have a very shaky grasp of basic math. There are THOUSANDS of gifted students nationwide. Harvard only accepts about 1900 of them each year.
yes, but who are they accepting -- and what edge do THEY have. My guess is race/ethnicity is definitely a factor.
Even if you were to fill every seat with white and Asian students with perfect gpa and test scores (disregarding other holistic factors), there would still be arguments over qualifications. The best university in Shanghai has to turn away thousands of students from the SAME ethnic group. So what would the rational argument be? I would think so many qualified students and just not enough seats.
I am a proponent of holistic admissions but I also realize that no premier college is going to admit someone who can't do the work. HYP (not the only game in town) is not going to risk their reputation of being academic powerhouses by admitting subpar students who can't handle the work.
There just aren't enough seats for everyone wanting HYP et al but with over 3000 colleges, there ARE seats available.
Because there aren't that many black students that are even remotely qualified to be at Ivy League schools. They give URMs big boosts, but even with that there just aren't that many who are close to Ivy League caliber.
This isn't for the Ivy League, but it's relevant WRT affirmative action: https://www.nas.org/images/documents/report_affirmative_action_at_three_universities.pdf
From the report: "The odds ratio for blacks compared to whites at NCS is 13 to 1, but at UVA it is 106 to 1 and at William &Mary 267 to 1. In other words, at UVA the odds of a black student being admitted is more than 100 times the odds of admission of a white student with the same qualifications. The odds of admitting a black applicant at William & Mary is more than 250 times the odds of admitting an equally-qualified white applicant."
It's interesting that as the university gets more selective, the odds ratio increases. I'd be very interested to see what it was at Harvard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If race is the predominant factor, can anyone tell me why minorities are not the majority in HYP and others and representation is usually in the low percentage?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Young, Gifted, and Not Getting Into Harvard" means one thing for sure...
The kid is Asian or White.
That is just complete bullshit. I think people who make statements like this must have a very shaky grasp of basic math. There are THOUSANDS of gifted students nationwide. Harvard only accepts about 1900 of them each year.
yes, but who are they accepting -- and what edge do THEY have. My guess is race/ethnicity is definitely a factor.
Even if you were to fill every seat with white and Asian students with perfect gpa and test scores (disregarding other holistic factors), there would still be arguments over qualifications. The best university in Shanghai has to turn away thousands of students from the SAME ethnic group. So what would the rational argument be? I would think so many qualified students and just not enough seats.
I am a proponent of holistic admissions but I also realize that no premier college is going to admit someone who can't do the work. HYP (not the only game in town) is not going to risk their reputation of being academic powerhouses by admitting subpar students who can't handle the work.
There just aren't enough seats for everyone wanting HYP et al but with over 3000 colleges, there ARE seats available.
Because there aren't that many black students that are even remotely qualified to be at Ivy League schools. They give URMs big boosts, but even with that there just aren't that many who are close to Ivy League caliber.
This isn't for the Ivy League, but it's relevant WRT affirmative action: https://www.nas.org/images/documents/report_affirmative_action_at_three_universities.pdf
From the report: "The odds ratio for blacks compared to whites at NCS is 13 to 1, but at UVA it is 106 to 1 and at William &Mary 267 to 1. In other words, at UVA the odds of a black student being admitted is more than 100 times the odds of admission of a white student with the same qualifications. The odds of admitting a black applicant at William & Mary is more than 250 times the odds of admitting an equally-qualified white applicant."
It's interesting that as the university gets more selective, the odds ratio increases. I'd be very interested to see what it was at Harvard.
Anonymous wrote:If race is the predominant factor, can anyone tell me why minorities are not the majority in HYP and others and representation is usually in the low percentage?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Young, Gifted, and Not Getting Into Harvard" means one thing for sure...
The kid is Asian or White.
That is just complete bullshit. I think people who make statements like this must have a very shaky grasp of basic math. There are THOUSANDS of gifted students nationwide. Harvard only accepts about 1900 of them each year.
yes, but who are they accepting -- and what edge do THEY have. My guess is race/ethnicity is definitely a factor.
Even if you were to fill every seat with white and Asian students with perfect gpa and test scores (disregarding other holistic factors), there would still be arguments over qualifications. The best university in Shanghai has to turn away thousands of students from the SAME ethnic group. So what would the rational argument be? I would think so many qualified students and just not enough seats.
I am a proponent of holistic admissions but I also realize that no premier college is going to admit someone who can't do the work. HYP (not the only game in town) is not going to risk their reputation of being academic powerhouses by admitting subpar students who can't handle the work.
There just aren't enough seats for everyone wanting HYP et al but with over 3000 colleges, there ARE seats available.
Anonymous wrote:Also, "gifted" alone is not a qualification for Harvard. Necessary but not sufficient, as my boss would say.