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.
18% of the 1.8 million AP students are NAPS.
You are dealing in huge numbers of kids for a few thousand spots. Deal with it.
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:And honestly, it has become an abusive big business. There are more and more tests for more and more money. In a few decades it went from everyone taking a test or two or everyone taking multiple SATs and ACTs and subjects tests, APs, IBs, etc. What a waste of time and money.
Anonymous wrote:I think admission officers look at Asian-Americans and think that are already blessed. Majority of them are good in studies (hello! all the achievement gap is being driven by asian americans) and majority will have zero college debt, will come from intact families, will be married and have at least middle class jobs. So the admission officers might think that AA are already blessed with a lot of things going right for them and they do not need an Ivy degree on top of every thing else. A top 50 school will work just fine.
Anonymous wrote:Clearly, if there are 21000+ in the top 1% of the existing standardized tests, there needs to be a more discriminating standardize test, one that opens up the field for the most academically elite.
But in reality, what will happen, is that those with the chops to do so will work without degrees, as the signal offered by degrees offered by universities that have diluted their brand will increasingly only be honored by institutions who have enough moat to pay for employees who are valued for their identity rather than their performance.
Anonymous wrote:Clearly, if there are 21000+ in the top 1% of the existing standardized tests, there needs to be a more discriminating standardize test, one that opens up the field for the most academically elite.
But in reality, what will happen, is that those with the chops to do so will work without degrees, as the signal offered by degrees offered by universities that have diluted their brand will increasingly only be honored by institutions who have enough moat to pay for employees who are valued for their identity rather than their performance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://vm.tiktok.com/ZMeaB1Nm9/
Truly sad what this country has become.
He might smart but unless he has the social skills or an athlete, he will be just another "nerd" among the thousands of Asians. Nothing special about him.
He is also on TikTok with a tremendous following. His alternate income stream at 17 is already doing better than your retirement account. LOL
Take a look at your own kid right now if you are a parent and realize how this kid has outperformed your rugrats.
How much does he make from tiktok? That is crazy. What content does he provide that is of value?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://vm.tiktok.com/ZMeaB1Nm9/
Truly sad what this country has become.
He might smart but unless he has the social skills or an athlete, he will be just another "nerd" among the thousands of Asians. Nothing special about him.
He is also on TikTok with a tremendous following. His alternate income stream at 17 is already doing better than your retirement account. LOL
Take a look at your own kid right now if you are a parent and realize how this kid has outperformed your rugrats.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://vm.tiktok.com/ZMeaB1Nm9/
Truly sad what this country has become.
He might smart but unless he has the social skills or an athlete, he will be just another "nerd" among the thousands of Asians. Nothing special about him.
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.
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.