Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know tons of people who didn’t make it.
DP, also Princeton alum. I know many who didn’t make it as well.
The shame is at a less rigorous school they probably would have been fine. The rigor is intense.
According to studies, the failure rate for organic chemistry classes nationwide is roughly 25-50%. Organic chemistry is considered a difficult class at, among other schools, Williams: see https://wso.williams.edu/wiki/index.php/Hard_classes#Organic_Chemistry
I think some at Ivies expect to sail through all their courses and treat any setbacks as unfair, but the point of going to an Ivy shouldn't be to be completely insulated from the challenges that students face at other universities. As a general matter, grade inflation is higher at Ivies than at many other schools.
Thus is just incorrect, Princeton stem doesn’t have the grade inflation you’ll find at Harvard or Yale. My child is pre med and currently taking orgo at a non-Ivy. Yes, there are kids not passing the course but most kids are scoring in the 70s and above. Her friends at Princeton reported a class average of 30 something in a regular chem class test this fall, and lower than that for Calc 1. It’s several orders of magnitude more difficult grading than STEM at peer schools.
I got a 40% on the first quiz in my Econ 101 class at Princeton and still got an A in the class. It was a test to let us know that we should stay on top of the course work or we'd fall behind later when it mattered more.
Class average and you having a bad test are different, no?
No, the class average on the first quiz was low, but we learned how to raise our game.
This notion that Princeton is exponential more difficult than other top schools is a load of bullshit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know tons of people who didn’t make it.
DP, also Princeton alum. I know many who didn’t make it as well.
The shame is at a less rigorous school they probably would have been fine. The rigor is intense.
According to studies, the failure rate for organic chemistry classes nationwide is roughly 25-50%. Organic chemistry is considered a difficult class at, among other schools, Williams: see https://wso.williams.edu/wiki/index.php/Hard_classes#Organic_Chemistry
I think some at Ivies expect to sail through all their courses and treat any setbacks as unfair, but the point of going to an Ivy shouldn't be to be completely insulated from the challenges that students face at other universities. As a general matter, grade inflation is higher at Ivies than at many other schools.
Thus is just incorrect, Princeton stem doesn’t have the grade inflation you’ll find at Harvard or Yale. My child is pre med and currently taking orgo at a non-Ivy. Yes, there are kids not passing the course but most kids are scoring in the 70s and above. Her friends at Princeton reported a class average of 30 something in a regular chem class test this fall, and lower than that for Calc 1. It’s several orders of magnitude more difficult grading than STEM at peer schools.
I got a 40% on the first quiz in my Econ 101 class at Princeton and still got an A in the class. It was a test to let us know that we should stay on top of the course work or we'd fall behind later when it mattered more.
Class average and you having a bad test are different, no?
No, the class average on the first quiz was low, but we learned how to raise our game.
This notion that Princeton is exponential more difficult than other top schools is a load of bullshit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know tons of people who didn’t make it.
DP, also Princeton alum. I know many who didn’t make it as well.
The shame is at a less rigorous school they probably would have been fine. The rigor is intense.
According to studies, the failure rate for organic chemistry classes nationwide is roughly 25-50%. Organic chemistry is considered a difficult class at, among other schools, Williams: see https://wso.williams.edu/wiki/index.php/Hard_classes#Organic_Chemistry
I think some at Ivies expect to sail through all their courses and treat any setbacks as unfair, but the point of going to an Ivy shouldn't be to be completely insulated from the challenges that students face at other universities. As a general matter, grade inflation is higher at Ivies than at many other schools.
Thus is just incorrect, Princeton stem doesn’t have the grade inflation you’ll find at Harvard or Yale. My child is pre med and currently taking orgo at a non-Ivy. Yes, there are kids not passing the course but most kids are scoring in the 70s and above. Her friends at Princeton reported a class average of 30 something in a regular chem class test this fall, and lower than that for Calc 1. It’s several orders of magnitude more difficult grading than STEM at peer schools.
I got a 40% on the first quiz in my Econ 101 class at Princeton and still got an A in the class. It was a test to let us know that we should stay on top of the course work or we'd fall behind later when it mattered more.
Class average and you having a bad test are different, no?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know tons of people who didn’t make it.
DP, also Princeton alum. I know many who didn’t make it as well.
The shame is at a less rigorous school they probably would have been fine. The rigor is intense.
According to studies, the failure rate for organic chemistry classes nationwide is roughly 25-50%. Organic chemistry is considered a difficult class at, among other schools, Williams: see https://wso.williams.edu/wiki/index.php/Hard_classes#Organic_Chemistry
I think some at Ivies expect to sail through all their courses and treat any setbacks as unfair, but the point of going to an Ivy shouldn't be to be completely insulated from the challenges that students face at other universities. As a general matter, grade inflation is higher at Ivies than at many other schools.
Thus is just incorrect, Princeton stem doesn’t have the grade inflation you’ll find at Harvard or Yale. My child is pre med and currently taking orgo at a non-Ivy. Yes, there are kids not passing the course but most kids are scoring in the 70s and above. Her friends at Princeton reported a class average of 30 something in a regular chem class test this fall, and lower than that for Calc 1. It’s several orders of magnitude more difficult grading than STEM at peer schools.
I got a 40% on the first quiz in my Econ 101 class at Princeton and still got an A in the class. It was a test to let us know that we should stay on top of the course work or we'd fall behind later when it mattered more.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know tons of people who didn’t make it.
DP, also Princeton alum. I know many who didn’t make it as well.
The shame is at a less rigorous school they probably would have been fine. The rigor is intense.
According to studies, the failure rate for organic chemistry classes nationwide is roughly 25-50%. Organic chemistry is considered a difficult class at, among other schools, Williams: see https://wso.williams.edu/wiki/index.php/Hard_classes#Organic_Chemistry
I think some at Ivies expect to sail through all their courses and treat any setbacks as unfair, but the point of going to an Ivy shouldn't be to be completely insulated from the challenges that students face at other universities. As a general matter, grade inflation is higher at Ivies than at many other schools.
Thus is just incorrect, Princeton stem doesn’t have the grade inflation you’ll find at Harvard or Yale. My child is pre med and currently taking orgo at a non-Ivy. Yes, there are kids not passing the course but most kids are scoring in the 70s and above. Her friends at Princeton reported a class average of 30 something in a regular chem class test this fall, and lower than that for Calc 1. It’s several orders of magnitude more difficult grading than STEM at peer schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know tons of people who didn’t make it.
DP, also Princeton alum. I know many who didn’t make it as well.
The shame is at a less rigorous school they probably would have been fine. The rigor is intense.
According to studies, the failure rate for organic chemistry classes nationwide is roughly 25-50%. Organic chemistry is considered a difficult class at, among other schools, Williams: see https://wso.williams.edu/wiki/index.php/Hard_classes#Organic_Chemistry
I think some at Ivies expect to sail through all their courses and treat any setbacks as unfair, but the point of going to an Ivy shouldn't be to be completely insulated from the challenges that students face at other universities. As a general matter, grade inflation is higher at Ivies than at many other schools.
Anonymous wrote:As a general matter, grade inflation is higher at Ivies than at many other schools.
At HYPSM you’re dealing the academically strongest gunners from their high school cohorts.
For the sake of argument, let’s imagine that at every school in America only 20% of people get A’s in Organic Chemistry. My claim is that the median Princeton student would likely be in the 20% of people who get A’s at most schools, whereas by the definition of “median”, at Princeton they will not get an A.
Now add on that the 20% assumption is probably not true of many near competitors like Harvard, Yale, or Stanford which likely give out more A’s. Under reasonable assumptions, for an identical student, it is likely much harder to get an A in Orgo at Princeton than at the vast majority of other colleges.
As a general matter, grade inflation is higher at Ivies than at many other schools.
Anonymous wrote:I know tons of people who didn’t make it.
DP, also Princeton alum. I know many who didn’t make it as well.
The shame is at a less rigorous school they probably would have been fine. The rigor is intense.
I know tons of people who didn’t make it.
Anonymous wrote:My dc is also premed at Princeton. not a stem genius. works very hard in stem classes and gets good grades. Got a great summer internship through Princeton with an alum at a major hospital. fully funded. DC works very hard but I think that comes with the terriority.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t know a single student at Princeton who truly was committed to pursuing a medical career who didn’t get into med school.
Orgo is a tough class at many universities across the nation.
https://www.insidehighered.com/views/2022/10/25/reflections-failing-organic-chemistry-opinion