Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most people agree to submit a 34 ACT or 1500+ SAT. Also AP scores if you have them. If you are at a private that doesn’t offer the AP courses but can still take the AP exam and do well-even better, esp at OOS flagships.
Lots of rumination by top colleges about their testing policies going forward-listen to Dartmouth and Yale podcasts. It is universally agreed that test scores help validate a strong GPA and if you aren’t in a preferred category (URM, FGLI, athlete or legacy) it can only help
To have that piece of the puzzle. For the few who make it into a top 25 school without them-those are the unicorns.
You do realize that for schools with sub-10 % acceptance rates, unhooked students who submit test scores and get in are also unicorns!
According to the Common Data Set:
28% of enrolled didn’t submit scores to Stanford
15% of enrolled didn’t submit scores to Princeton
19% of enrolled didn’t submit scores to Brown
17% of enrolled didn’t submit scores to Harvard
40% of enrolled didn’t submit scores to Cornell
One would expect to find that most of those non-submitters were athletes, legacies, and URM.
In other words, not your kid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most people agree to submit a 34 ACT or 1500+ SAT. Also AP scores if you have them. If you are at a private that doesn’t offer the AP courses but can still take the AP exam and do well-even better, esp at OOS flagships.
Lots of rumination by top colleges about their testing policies going forward-listen to Dartmouth and Yale podcasts. It is universally agreed that test scores help validate a strong GPA and if you aren’t in a preferred category (URM, FGLI, athlete or legacy) it can only help
To have that piece of the puzzle. For the few who make it into a top 25 school without them-those are the unicorns.
You do realize that for schools with sub-10 % acceptance rates, unhooked students who submit test scores and get in are also unicorns!
According to the Common Data Set:
28% of enrolled didn’t submit scores to Stanford
15% of enrolled didn’t submit scores to Princeton
19% of enrolled didn’t submit scores to Brown
17% of enrolled didn’t submit scores to Harvard
40% of enrolled didn’t submit scores to Cornell
At nearly all these schools, the number of hooked students exceeds test optional students by a decent margin
40% of Cornell is not hooked
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most people agree to submit a 34 ACT or 1500+ SAT. Also AP scores if you have them. If you are at a private that doesn’t offer the AP courses but can still take the AP exam and do well-even better, esp at OOS flagships.
Lots of rumination by top colleges about their testing policies going forward-listen to Dartmouth and Yale podcasts. It is universally agreed that test scores help validate a strong GPA and if you aren’t in a preferred category (URM, FGLI, athlete or legacy) it can only help
To have that piece of the puzzle. For the few who make it into a top 25 school without them-those are the unicorns.
You do realize that for schools with sub-10 % acceptance rates, unhooked students who submit test scores and get in are also unicorns!
According to the Common Data Set:
28% of enrolled didn’t submit scores to Stanford
15% of enrolled didn’t submit scores to Princeton
19% of enrolled didn’t submit scores to Brown
17% of enrolled didn’t submit scores to Harvard
40% of enrolled didn’t submit scores to Cornell
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:40% of Cornell is probably hooked if you add up legacy, first gen, URM, and athletic admits. A few years ago, 30% of the Harvard class was legacy.
Harvard tiny compared Cornell.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:40% of Cornell is probably hooked if you add up legacy, first gen, URM, and athletic admits. A few years ago, 30% of the Harvard class was legacy.
40% of 15k undergrads? What?!?
You guys are insane. Do some research on what colleges at Cornell are TO before spewing this stupid stuff.
Anonymous wrote:40% of Cornell is probably hooked if you add up legacy, first gen, URM, and athletic admits. A few years ago, 30% of the Harvard class was legacy.
Anonymous wrote:40% of Cornell is probably hooked if you add up legacy, first gen, URM, and athletic admits. A few years ago, 30% of the Harvard class was legacy.
Anonymous wrote:Admit rates for students submitting swamp those not submitting. Some of this is selection bias, but anyone claiming that app readers don’t assume a “no score” at Chicago, say, means <1500 is kidding themselves. Reality is that test optional is for hooked kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most people agree to submit a 34 ACT or 1500+ SAT. Also AP scores if you have them. If you are at a private that doesn’t offer the AP courses but can still take the AP exam and do well-even better, esp at OOS flagships.
Lots of rumination by top colleges about their testing policies going forward-listen to Dartmouth and Yale podcasts. It is universally agreed that test scores help validate a strong GPA and if you aren’t in a preferred category (URM, FGLI, athlete or legacy) it can only help
To have that piece of the puzzle. For the few who make it into a top 25 school without them-those are the unicorns.
You do realize that for schools with sub-10 % acceptance rates, unhooked students who submit test scores and get in are also unicorns!
According to the Common Data Set:
28% of enrolled didn’t submit scores to Stanford
15% of enrolled didn’t submit scores to Princeton
19% of enrolled didn’t submit scores to Brown
17% of enrolled didn’t submit scores to Harvard
40% of enrolled didn’t submit scores to Cornell
At nearly all these schools, the number of hooked students exceeds test optional students by a decent margin
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most people agree to submit a 34 ACT or 1500+ SAT. Also AP scores if you have them. If you are at a private that doesn’t offer the AP courses but can still take the AP exam and do well-even better, esp at OOS flagships.
Lots of rumination by top colleges about their testing policies going forward-listen to Dartmouth and Yale podcasts. It is universally agreed that test scores help validate a strong GPA and if you aren’t in a preferred category (URM, FGLI, athlete or legacy) it can only help
To have that piece of the puzzle. For the few who make it into a top 25 school without them-those are the unicorns.
You do realize that for schools with sub-10 % acceptance rates, unhooked students who submit test scores and get in are also unicorns!
According to the Common Data Set:
28% of enrolled didn’t submit scores to Stanford
15% of enrolled didn’t submit scores to Princeton
19% of enrolled didn’t submit scores to Brown
17% of enrolled didn’t submit scores to Harvard
40% of enrolled didn’t submit scores to Cornell