Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is a really small number of students who have
1) Perfect Scores AND
2) In the top 1% of their class AND
3) National AP Scholar
These kids really should be and would be in their top choice college, if these universities cared about academics.
I'll be honest, I do not equate top scores on the SAT with "academics." Even the test prep companies admit that they are not teaching your child academics. They are teaching them the "tricks' and strategies of test taking. That is not academics.
I'm not impressed by National AP scholar either.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is a really small number of students who have
1) Perfect Scores AND
2) In the top 1% of their class AND
3) National AP Scholar
These kids really should be and would be in their top choice college, if these universities cared about academics.
Depends on what you think is a small number. It is more likely that kids with perfect scores are also at the top of their class and scored 5's on AP test. Probably 10-15K per year. Still higher than combined seats at HYPS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In 2020, there were 22,000 students who scored above a 1550 on the SAT. That is the top 1%. There were 21,000 students who scored a 35 or 36 on the ACT.
This student is certainly exceptional at test taking (and maybe he has an exceptional transcript to match) but he is competing against the other 22k kids who got the exact same scores.
Harvard offered admission to exactly 2,056 students this year.
Princeton admitted 1,890.
Yale admitted 2,272.
See how this works? 22,000 students with that near perfect SAT score. We can't add the perfect SAT kids with the perfect ACT kids, because there is certainly overlap with some students taking both and getting a top score on both, so let's just go with the SAT number only, since Charlie from TikTok listed SAT scores.
If we are going purely on scores, there are 20k students who will not be admitted because of the number of slots. I think the problem is that many of these students (and their parents) are unable to understand quite how many students are just as competitive as their child.
Exactly. “But RACISM!!”![]()
Except all these numbers are wrong. Pulled from someone's a*s hole.
NP: Which numbers are wrong? According to Prep Scholar, assuming it is a reputable source, the SAT/ACT numbers are correct.
https://blog.prepscholar.com/how-many-people-get-a-34-35-36-on-the-act-score-breakdown#:~:text=Percentage%20of%20All%20Test%20Takers&text=Unsurprisingly%2C%20a%20full%2036%20is,0.961%25%20of%20test%20takers%20earned.
Do you have another source with different numbers?
To give you a hint, you need to google "1% percentile of SAT", which I believe is 1510-1520. Then multiple the 1% by the total number of students who took the SAT tests in 2020. Report back here.
According to prep scholar
6500 out of 2.2 million get 1550+
1400 get 1590+
500 get 1600+
There should be plenty of spots available for these students in the top 20 schools and plenty left over for students who excel in non-academic pursuits
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In 2020, there were 22,000 students who scored above a 1550 on the SAT. That is the top 1%. There were 21,000 students who scored a 35 or 36 on the ACT.
This student is certainly exceptional at test taking (and maybe he has an exceptional transcript to match) but he is competing against the other 22k kids who got the exact same scores.
Harvard offered admission to exactly 2,056 students this year.
Princeton admitted 1,890.
Yale admitted 2,272.
See how this works? 22,000 students with that near perfect SAT score. We can't add the perfect SAT kids with the perfect ACT kids, because there is certainly overlap with some students taking both and getting a top score on both, so let's just go with the SAT number only, since Charlie from TikTok listed SAT scores.
If we are going purely on scores, there are 20k students who will not be admitted because of the number of slots. I think the problem is that many of these students (and their parents) are unable to understand quite how many students are just as competitive as their child.
Exactly. “But RACISM!!”![]()
Except all these numbers are wrong. Pulled from someone's a*s hole.
NP: Which numbers are wrong? According to Prep Scholar, assuming it is a reputable source, the SAT/ACT numbers are correct.
https://blog.prepscholar.com/how-many-people-get-a-34-35-36-on-the-act-score-breakdown#:~:text=Percentage%20of%20All%20Test%20Takers&text=Unsurprisingly%2C%20a%20full%2036%20is,0.961%25%20of%20test%20takers%20earned.
Do you have another source with different numbers?
To give you a hint, you need to google "1% percentile of SAT", which I believe is 1510-1520. Then multiple the 1% by the total number of students who took the SAT tests in 2020. Report back here.
), but you get the point. American Universities aren't soley looking at test scores. You're not entitiled to get into the college you want to - there are plenty out there.Anonymous wrote:There is a really small number of students who have
1) Perfect Scores AND
2) In the top 1% of their class AND
3) National AP Scholar
These kids really should be and would be in their top choice college, if these universities cared about academics.
Anonymous wrote:There is a really small number of students who have
1) Perfect Scores AND
2) In the top 1% of their class AND
3) National AP Scholar
These kids really should be and would be in their top choice college, if these universities cared about academics.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, racism against white people is the real problem in America.
The point has sailed right over your head. No one has claimed your strawman. What we ARE saying is that you can’t possibly claim “racism” against Asian applicants when just as many - if not more - white students with excellent stats are being rejected. Deal with it and quit playing the victim.
Except white students with mediocre stats are being accepted because of their legacy or athletic status
Do you have a stat for that claim? Or did you pull it right out of your a$$ hole?
Anonymous wrote:There is a really small number of students who have
1) Perfect Scores AND
2) In the top 1% of their class AND
3) National AP Scholar
These kids really should be and would be in their top choice college, if these universities cared about academics.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, racism against white people is the real problem in America.
The point has sailed right over your head. No one has claimed your strawman. What we ARE saying is that you can’t possibly claim “racism” against Asian applicants when just as many - if not more - white students with excellent stats are being rejected. Deal with it and quit playing the victim.
Except white students with mediocre stats are being accepted because of their legacy or athletic status
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In 2020, there were 22,000 students who scored above a 1550 on the SAT. That is the top 1%. There were 21,000 students who scored a 35 or 36 on the ACT.
This student is certainly exceptional at test taking (and maybe he has an exceptional transcript to match) but he is competing against the other 22k kids who got the exact same scores.
Harvard offered admission to exactly 2,056 students this year.
Princeton admitted 1,890.
Yale admitted 2,272.
See how this works? 22,000 students with that near perfect SAT score. We can't add the perfect SAT kids with the perfect ACT kids, because there is certainly overlap with some students taking both and getting a top score on both, so let's just go with the SAT number only, since Charlie from TikTok listed SAT scores.
If we are going purely on scores, there are 20k students who will not be admitted because of the number of slots. I think the problem is that many of these students (and their parents) are unable to understand quite how many students are just as competitive as their child.
Exactly. “But RACISM!!”![]()
Except all these numbers are wrong. Pulled from someone's a*s hole.
NP: Which numbers are wrong? According to Prep Scholar, assuming it is a reputable source, the SAT/ACT numbers are correct.
https://blog.prepscholar.com/how-many-people-get-a-34-35-36-on-the-act-score-breakdown#:~:text=Percentage%20of%20All%20Test%20Takers&text=Unsurprisingly%2C%20a%20full%2036%20is,0.961%25%20of%20test%20takers%20earned.
Do you have another source with different numbers?
To give you a hint, you need to google "1% percentile of SAT", which I believe is 1510-1520. Then multiple the 1% by the total number of students who took the SAT tests in 2020. Report back here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In 2020, there were 22,000 students who scored above a 1550 on the SAT. That is the top 1%. There were 21,000 students who scored a 35 or 36 on the ACT.
This student is certainly exceptional at test taking (and maybe he has an exceptional transcript to match) but he is competing against the other 22k kids who got the exact same scores.
Harvard offered admission to exactly 2,056 students this year.
Princeton admitted 1,890.
Yale admitted 2,272.
See how this works? 22,000 students with that near perfect SAT score. We can't add the perfect SAT kids with the perfect ACT kids, because there is certainly overlap with some students taking both and getting a top score on both, so let's just go with the SAT number only, since Charlie from TikTok listed SAT scores.
If we are going purely on scores, there are 20k students who will not be admitted because of the number of slots. I think the problem is that many of these students (and their parents) are unable to understand quite how many students are just as competitive as their child.
Exactly. “But RACISM!!”![]()
Except all these numbers are wrong. Pulled from someone's a*s hole.
NP: Which numbers are wrong? According to Prep Scholar, assuming it is a reputable source, the SAT/ACT numbers are correct.
https://blog.prepscholar.com/how-many-people-get-a-34-35-36-on-the-act-score-breakdown#:~:text=Percentage%20of%20All%20Test%20Takers&text=Unsurprisingly%2C%20a%20full%2036%20is,0.961%25%20of%20test%20takers%20earned.
Do you have another source with different numbers?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, racism against white people is the real problem in America.
The point has sailed right over your head. No one has claimed your strawman. What we ARE saying is that you can’t possibly claim “racism” against Asian applicants when just as many - if not more - white students with excellent stats are being rejected. Deal with it and quit playing the victim.
Except white students with mediocre stats are being accepted because of their legacy or athletic status