Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm confused. If 40% come from privates, that means 60% come from public schools, which makes them the majority. What's the issue here?
Private school graduates are less than 9% of U.S. high school graduates each year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm confused. If 40% come from privates, that means 60% come from public schools, which makes them the majority. What's the issue here?
Private school graduates are less than 9% of U.S. high school graduates each year.
Anonymous wrote:I'm confused. If 40% come from privates, that means 60% come from public schools, which makes them the majority. What's the issue here?
Anonymous wrote:Let the highest achieving kids get in and stop with the DEI nonsense. Just because your kid is disadvantaged and can barely read doesn’t mean they should go to Harvard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would you ever think that the current admissions system is equitable? It has never been and likely will never be. Get over it.
Because these institutions live, breathe and die for DEI. Yet here we are.
They are mocking us.
No, they pretend to live, breathe and ie for DEI.
They aren’t mocking you, they are lying to you.
Anonymous wrote:I'm confused. If 40% come from privates, that means 60% come from public schools, which makes them the majority. What's the issue here?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Independent private schools (not the Mary O'Mary's Catholic/parochial school for girls and boys type that middle and lower middle class families send their kids to), comprise 40% of the student body at most Ivy League schools.
Where is the outrage in the name of equity? Where are the protests? The changemakers? Maybe there will be a sit-in at Harvard this admissions season, definitely at Brown. Rise up, no equity, no peace...
Bueller...Bueller...
Presumably the independent private schools are also enrolling with equity in mind, so can you say which kids from the private schools are matriculating to Ivies?
+1 For example, all of the Big 3 privates in DC award financial aid to over 20% of their students, so presumably many of those students are included in the 40% OP refers to (but doesn't cite the source for the number). Given these colleges' current focus on FGLI and other institutional priorities, it's possible these students might even be overrepresented in the Ivy acceptances from privates.
Do you think 20% of the students at insert-your-school-name-here come from families making less the $65k/yr for a family of four?
Really?
I specifically cited the Big 3 in DC as an example. Google any of them and "financial aid." Do you think they're publicly lying? My kids are at one of these, and I was honestly surprised the percentage was that low.
No, they aren’t lying because it would be too easy to prove they were. But do you really think that 20% of the families in any of these schools qualify for QuestBridge? No, a lot of the FA the schools give out goes to families living well above the QB income level. Well above.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Independent private schools (not the Mary O'Mary's Catholic/parochial school for girls and boys type that middle and lower middle class families send their kids to), comprise 40% of the student body at most Ivy League schools.
Where is the outrage in the name of equity? Where are the protests? The changemakers? Maybe there will be a sit-in at Harvard this admissions season, definitely at Brown. Rise up, no equity, no peace...
Bueller...Bueller...
Presumably the independent private schools are also enrolling with equity in mind, so can you say which kids from the private schools are matriculating to Ivies?
+1 For example, all of the Big 3 privates in DC award financial aid to over 20% of their students, so presumably many of those students are included in the 40% OP refers to (but doesn't cite the source for the number). Given these colleges' current focus on FGLI and other institutional priorities, it's possible these students might even be overrepresented in the Ivy acceptances from privates.
Do you think 20% of the students at insert-your-school-name-here come from families making less the $65k/yr for a family of four?
Really?
I specifically cited the Big 3 in DC as an example. Google any of them and "financial aid." Do you think they're publicly lying? My kids are at one of these, and I was honestly surprised the percentage was that low.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Independent private schools (not the Mary O'Mary's Catholic/parochial school for girls and boys type that middle and lower middle class families send their kids to), comprise 40% of the student body at most Ivy League schools.
Where is the outrage in the name of equity? Where are the protests? The changemakers? Maybe there will be a sit-in at Harvard this admissions season, definitely at Brown. Rise up, no equity, no peace...
Bueller...Bueller...
Presumably the independent private schools are also enrolling with equity in mind, so can you say which kids from the private schools are matriculating to Ivies?
+1 For example, all of the Big 3 privates in DC award financial aid to over 20% of their students, so presumably many of those students are included in the 40% OP refers to (but doesn't cite the source for the number). Given these colleges' current focus on FGLI and other institutional priorities, it's possible these students might even be overrepresented in the Ivy acceptances from privates.
Do you think 20% of the students at insert-your-school-name-here come from families making less the $65k/yr for a family of four?
Really?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would you ever think that the current admissions system is equitable? It has never been and likely will never be. Get over it.
Because these institutions live, breathe and die for DEI. Yet here we are.
They are mocking us.
Anonymous wrote:Independent private schools (not the Mary O'Mary's Catholic/parochial school for girls and boys type that middle and lower middle class families send their kids to), comprise 40% of the student body at most Ivy League schools.
Where is the outrage in the name of equity? Where are the protests? The changemakers? Maybe there will be a sit-in at Harvard this admissions season, definitely at Brown. Rise up, no equity, no peace...
Bueller...Bueller...