Anonymous wrote:I attended a high school graduation ceremony in flyover country in 2019 and even my senile grandmother noted it appeared the entire school was graduating with honors. Yet if you read the program, seniors in the overall top 25 were undecided, going to community college, and local commuter university. Fake grades are conning parents around the country and public school boards, admins and teacher's unions don't give a damn.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Looking at Scattergrams, there are many kids with low grades but high test scores. There are few with high grades but low scores. Things track pretty well.
There are so many students with very high GPAs and low test scores. This is why they are applying test optional.
This is why SATs matter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Test optional is to backdoor URMs with fake grades and low scores; so the scores won’t jeopardize rankings and be used in affirmative action lawsuits."
That's not how it works.
I was an affirmative action admit in the 1980s to a HSY school. I had straight As in the hardest classes my sad high school offered. I also had really impressive ECs. And I scored in the 85% on the SAT, which might not be in the range you'd expect for a kid at my college. But it was high enough to tell the AO that even though I was graduating from a school in a low-income area and my mom only completed 8 years of school, I was clearly super smart if I could manage to score at that level coming from my background. And my essays made it painfully obvious that I was driven and would succeed if they just gave me a chance. That Hamilton line about being young, hungry and scrappy always makes me laugh because it describes me to a T. I did just fine in college and went on to earn a PhD from another HSY school. I have a great job now doing something that contributes to society. That is how affirmative action works.
Agreed and impressive. What's happening now is different.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Test optional is to backdoor URMs with fake grades and low scores; so the scores won’t jeopardize rankings and be used in affirmative action lawsuits."
That's not how it works.
I was an affirmative action admit in the 1980s to a HSY school. I had straight As in the hardest classes my sad high school offered. I also had really impressive ECs. And I scored in the 85% on the SAT, which might not be in the range you'd expect for a kid at my college. But it was high enough to tell the AO that even though I was graduating from a school in a low-income area and my mom only completed 8 years of school, I was clearly super smart if I could manage to score at that level coming from my background. And my essays made it painfully obvious that I was driven and would succeed if they just gave me a chance. That Hamilton line about being young, hungry and scrappy always makes me laugh because it describes me to a T. I did just fine in college and went on to earn a PhD from another HSY school. I have a great job now doing something that contributes to society. That is how affirmative action works.
Agreed and impressive. What's happening now is different.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Looking at Scattergrams, there are many kids with low grades but high test scores. There are few with high grades but low scores. Things track pretty well.
There are so many students with very high GPAs and low test scores. This is why they are applying test optional.
Anonymous wrote:Looking at Scattergrams, there are many kids with low grades but high test scores. There are few with high grades but low scores. Things track pretty well.
Anonymous wrote:"Test optional is to backdoor URMs with fake grades and low scores; so the scores won’t jeopardize rankings and be used in affirmative action lawsuits."
That's not how it works.
I was an affirmative action admit in the 1980s to a HSY school. I had straight As in the hardest classes my sad high school offered. I also had really impressive ECs. And I scored in the 85% on the SAT, which might not be in the range you'd expect for a kid at my college. But it was high enough to tell the AO that even though I was graduating from a school in a low-income area and my mom only completed 8 years of school, I was clearly super smart if I could manage to score at that level coming from my background. And my essays made it painfully obvious that I was driven and would succeed if they just gave me a chance. That Hamilton line about being young, hungry and scrappy always makes me laugh because it describes me to a T. I did just fine in college and went on to earn a PhD from another HSY school. I have a great job now doing something that contributes to society. That is how affirmative action works.
Anonymous wrote:I attended a high school graduation ceremony in flyover country in 2019 and even my senile grandmother noted it appeared the entire school was graduating with honors. Yet if you read the program, seniors in the overall top 25 were undecided, going to community college, and local commuter university. Fake grades are conning parents around the country and public school boards, admins and teacher's unions don't give a damn.
Anonymous wrote:I attended a high school graduation ceremony in flyover country in 2019 and even my senile grandmother noted it appeared the entire school was graduating with honors. Yet if you read the program, seniors in the overall top 25 were undecided, going to community college, and local commuter university. Fake grades are conning parents around the country and public school boards, admins and teacher's unions don't give a damn.
Anonymous wrote:NP. Maybe now eyes will be opened on the complete lack of standardization of grades. Sure everyone knows this, but it seems like colleges, and by extension some discussion here at DCUM, act as though we can compare them.
Anonymous wrote:While I absolutely believe there is a small subset of very bright kids who have test issues (e.g. w/speed) such that scores do not indicate the status of their academic skills, there is a sense that most kids applying test optional are decent students with great grades but lower scores, and dwarf that group. I don't know how admissions would be able to tell the difference.
Anonymous wrote:I suppose I'm not a fan of the current test optional environment and wonder how admissions evolves from here, how many highly selective colleges will go back to requiring scores, or de facto requiring whether stated or not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"In mcps, each high school has a school profile that you can access and it shows weighted grade distribution among graduating seniors. Last year I checked ours (Churchill) and was shocked at how many students have over 4.5 - I want to say over 1/4 of the grade. So, most of them probably have 4.0 or close to it unweighted."
Could you please share the link to this info?
https://www2.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/siteassets/schools/high-schools/r-w/churchillhs/uploadedfiles/careercenter/class20of20202020final20profile.pdf
29% of the graduating class had a 4.51 or higher.
Yet the SAT average is only 1317 -- Something's not adding up
Well a 79.5 in the first quarter and a 89.5 in the second Quarter equals an A for a semester. You basically have to be an idiot to not get As in Montgomery County.