Anonymous wrote:Mean IQ at MIT could be as high as 30 points above that of Harvard( undergraduate school)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's going on with the bashing of Harvard on here? Is it just a few folks?
The people being interviewed sounds sad.
This was not our experience with the hard working kids we know at Harvard.
Well, Harvard is the easy school to attack. Because, Harvard. No one is punching down when it comes to Harvard.
But I do think there's an increasing sense that Harvard undergrad is very mediocre - whether due to grade inflation or all the hooked students. The best and brightest go elsewhere these days. And yet Harvard remains on top of the pedestal. So that bothers some people. I know that at my kids high school, an app to Harvard is regarded as pretentious and "striver" for lack of a better word. These are kids going for the brand rather than the education and experience. And people judge accordingly.
They have a higher grade point *average* than the rest of the school "combined"? Were you a student athlete yourself?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:About a quarter of students at Harvard are prepared for the rigor. They are not admitting kids who are academically prepared.
DEI (diversity), athletes, donor kids, celebrities' kids, legacies etc. make up about 70% of the class. Rest were admitted on merits.
Athletes have a higher GPA than the rest of the school combined.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's going on with the bashing of Harvard on here? Is it just a few folks?
The people being interviewed sounds sad.
This was not our experience with the hard working kids we know at Harvard.
Well, Harvard is the easy school to attack. Because, Harvard. No one is punching down when it comes to Harvard.
But I do think there's an increasing sense that Harvard undergrad is very mediocre - whether due to grade inflation or all the hooked students. The best and brightest go elsewhere these days. And yet Harvard remains on top of the pedestal. So that bothers some people. I know that at my kids high school, an app to Harvard is regarded as pretentious and "striver" for lack of a better word. These are kids going for the brand rather than the education and experience. And people judge accordingly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's surreal to read this.
The students' reaction: Hysterical
"The whole entire day, I was crying," 'I Was Just Sobbing in Bed': Mentally unstable
"any effort to crack down on grade inflation 'attacks the very notion of what Harvard is.'": Come on
I asked my freshman son about this and he said that The Crimson must have sought out the most hysterical reactions they could possibly find. None of his friends reacted this way. They are all studying hard, prioritizing their classes and enjoying the ECs on the side. They knew what they were signing up for.
Easy grades?
My son has one class that he’d consider easy and that’s because it’s somewhat of a retake of a HS class. He’s in the library nightly and works thru the weekend (makes time to party at night).
The class of ‘29 had to submit SATs… they should be prepared for whatever Harvard throws at them.
Ah yes, their simplified SAT with their grade inflated academic profiles. They’d cry if they had any actual rigor thrown at them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's surreal to read this.
The students' reaction: Hysterical
"The whole entire day, I was crying," 'I Was Just Sobbing in Bed': Mentally unstable
"any effort to crack down on grade inflation 'attacks the very notion of what Harvard is.'": Come on
I asked my freshman son about this and he said that The Crimson must have sought out the most hysterical reactions they could possibly find. None of his friends reacted this way. They are all studying hard, prioritizing their classes and enjoying the ECs on the side. They knew what they were signing up for.
Easy grades?
My son has one class that he’d consider easy and that’s because it’s somewhat of a retake of a HS class. He’s in the library nightly and works thru the weekend (makes time to party at night).
The class of ‘29 had to submit SATs… they should be prepared for whatever Harvard throws at them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:High schools are not preparing students for college. Period. Everyone always says "Oh, but MY kids' school is different. MY kids' school has real rigor." It's bullshit.
In the past several years, parents and kids game the system. How to get the highest GPA possible to get in ivies. Strategically avoid rigorous courses. So many on dcum advised that Calculus BC is not needed. Taking multi variable calculus is insane. Results: snowflake who cried the whole day and skipped classes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's surreal to read this.
The students' reaction: Hysterical
"The whole entire day, I was crying," 'I Was Just Sobbing in Bed': Mentally unstable
"any effort to crack down on grade inflation 'attacks the very notion of what Harvard is.'": Come on
I asked my freshman son about this and he said that The Crimson must have sought out the most hysterical reactions they could possibly find. None of his friends reacted this way. They are all studying hard, prioritizing their classes and enjoying the ECs on the side. They knew what they were signing up for.
Easy grades?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's surreal to read this.
The students' reaction: Hysterical
"The whole entire day, I was crying," 'I Was Just Sobbing in Bed': Mentally unstable
"any effort to crack down on grade inflation 'attacks the very notion of what Harvard is.'": Come on
I asked my freshman son about this and he said that The Crimson must have sought out the most hysterical reactions they could possibly find. None of his friends reacted this way. They are all studying hard, prioritizing their classes and enjoying the ECs on the side. They knew what they were signing up for.
Anonymous wrote:It's surreal to read this.
The students' reaction: Hysterical
"The whole entire day, I was crying," 'I Was Just Sobbing in Bed': Mentally unstable
"any effort to crack down on grade inflation 'attacks the very notion of what Harvard is.'": Come on
Anonymous wrote:High schools are not preparing students for college. Period. Everyone always says "Oh, but MY kids' school is different. MY kids' school has real rigor." It's bullshit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:About a quarter of students at Harvard are prepared for the rigor. They are not admitting kids who are academically prepared.
DEI (diversity), athletes, donor kids, celebrities' kids, legacies etc. make up about 70% of the class. Rest were admitted on merits.
Athletes have a higher GPA than the rest of the school combined.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:About a quarter of students at Harvard are prepared for the rigor. They are not admitting kids who are academically prepared.
DEI (diversity), athletes, donor kids, celebrities' kids, legacies etc. make up about 70% of the class. Rest were admitted on merits.