Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was a kid who had a lower SAT score because of HHI. My own kid had Khan and other sophisticated online programs that were free or nearly free.
I think the era of SAT = wealth is over.
But talk to me about athletes and legacy before any of the rest of this.
According to the College Board’s own data, scores are still highly correlated with income. (And if you don’t trust their data, why would you trust their exam?)
There’s much more variation in income bands than there is across income bands. Smart people generally make more money than stupid people, and since intelligence is highly heritable the children of more well off parents are on average smarter than the children of poorer parents.
People don’t like this, but it’s reality.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was a kid who had a lower SAT score because of HHI. My own kid had Khan and other sophisticated online programs that were free or nearly free.
I think the era of SAT = wealth is over.
But talk to me about athletes and legacy before any of the rest of this.
According to the College Board’s own data, scores are still highly correlated with income. (And if you don’t trust their data, why would you trust their exam?)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was a kid who had a lower SAT score because of HHI. My own kid had Khan and other sophisticated online programs that were free or nearly free.
I think the era of SAT = wealth is over.
But talk to me about athletes and legacy before any of the rest of this.
According to the College Board’s own data, scores are still highly correlated with income. (And if you don’t trust their data, why would you trust their exam?)
There’s much more variation in income bands than there is across income bands. Smart people generally make more money than stupid people, and since intelligence is highly heritable the children of more well off parents are on average smarter than the children of poorer parents.
People don’t like this, but it’s reality.
Academic eugenics
Anonymous wrote:There's more and more pressure to increase the transparency of admissions at these schools. Any thoughts?
Many studies have shown that the tests, contrary to myth, are not racially biased; they are not just an indicator of socioeconomic status; they are predictive all the way up the scale; they predict not just school performance but also life success; and they are not significantly goosed upward by test prep courses.
Moreover, the alternatives are worse. High school grades measure motivation as well as aptitude, but their value has been sinking as grades have been inflating. Personal statements and teacher recommendations are burnished by admissions-savvy experts at expensive private and suburban schools. Extracurriculars like fencing, rowing, traveling to Italy, or having your mom drive you to a church to sort clothes for the homeless, are luxuries of the rich.
Worst of all, “holistic admissions” can be a fig leaf that conceals racial discrimination: In the past against Jewish and Black applicants, and more recently against Asian applicants, who just happened to get lower ratings in squishy judgments of personality.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was a kid who had a lower SAT score because of HHI. My own kid had Khan and other sophisticated online programs that were free or nearly free.
I think the era of SAT = wealth is over.
But talk to me about athletes and legacy before any of the rest of this.
According to the College Board’s own data, scores are still highly correlated with income. (And if you don’t trust their data, why would you trust their exam?)
There’s much more variation in income bands than there is across income bands. Smart people generally make more money than stupid people, and since intelligence is highly heritable the children of more well off parents are on average smarter than the children of poorer parents.
People don’t like this, but it’s reality.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I mean, it would end up producing a demographic mix that the alumni and donors would have a heart attack over.
I will get criticized for this, but almost no one wants to attend a school that's 65% suburban striver Asian kids, 30% white kids, and black/latinos making up maybe 5% at most. The campus environment would be incredibly dreary, and everyone knows this.
Why? Because of their skin color?
Nobody complained about white strivers. They will applaud URM strivers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ever since the tech bros got on the scene, people have been obsessed with IQ.
Yes, if you think your child is the next Pierre Bourdieu or Harold Bloom, IQ dictates much of their life and, frankly, will ostracize them a bit. I don’t mean to offend, but highly intelligent people tend to be neurodivergent or social outsiders. These types are great fits for a PhD and eventually rise quickly in their fields, but I don’t think it makes sense to center the entirety of undergrad around capturing the highest talent for a PhD.
False. It’s just a smear campaign against the highly intelligent people, and it only happens in the U.S.
Anonymous wrote:Ever since the tech bros got on the scene, people have been obsessed with IQ.
Yes, if you think your child is the next Pierre Bourdieu or Harold Bloom, IQ dictates much of their life and, frankly, will ostracize them a bit. I don’t mean to offend, but highly intelligent people tend to be neurodivergent or social outsiders. These types are great fits for a PhD and eventually rise quickly in their fields, but I don’t think it makes sense to center the entirety of undergrad around capturing the highest talent for a PhD.
Anonymous wrote:This is probably tilting at windmills but I expected more from Pinker. His whole thesis seems to be that optimizing for "objective measures" like test scores in admissions would optimize across many dimensions (such as achievements in the arts, music, humanities and sciences). Hence, Harvard should strive to become more "meritocratic", whatever that means.
But the study he cites is the famous longitudinal study of precocious 13 year olds, who were already identified as gifted! Given the social makeup of the US, it is highly likely (the study cites that 75% of the kids were white, 20% were Asian) that the participants were middle class kids, with ample opportunities to develop their talents. This is a very skewed sample, but even then, there is no mention of high achievements in music, theater, dance etc by age 38. Yes, these kids probably enriched their college environments but clearly they aren't outliers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was a kid who had a lower SAT score because of HHI. My own kid had Khan and other sophisticated online programs that were free or nearly free.
I think the era of SAT = wealth is over.
But talk to me about athletes and legacy before any of the rest of this.
According to the College Board’s own data, scores are still highly correlated with income. (And if you don’t trust their data, why would you trust their exam?)
There’s much more variation in income bands than there is across income bands. Smart people generally make more money than stupid people, and since intelligence is highly heritable the children of more well off parents are on average smarter than the children of poorer parents.
People don’t like this, but it’s reality.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was a kid who had a lower SAT score because of HHI. My own kid had Khan and other sophisticated online programs that were free or nearly free.
I think the era of SAT = wealth is over.
But talk to me about athletes and legacy before any of the rest of this.
According to the College Board’s own data, scores are still highly correlated with income. (And if you don’t trust their data, why would you trust their exam?)
Anonymous wrote:Standardized tests reward a certain kind of learning and prep. It's helpful but not a full or super nuanced picture. It is mostly a multiple choice test. I'd hate to be reduced to a number like on the South Korean CSAT although that is only once per year and no retest and covers 5 different subjects not just two.
I think grades, interviews, references and essays are more important than prepping for a standardized test resourced students can prep for and take unlimited times.
Anonymous wrote:Before DEI, all the competitive programs RSI, SSP, several MIT programs, all very standard asking for SAT score. Now there may be only one or two still allowing you to even submit SAT score.