Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe results were lost somewhere in this thread for SFS...but I have not seen any posters responding to what the EA/ED results were for SFS. Can someone post their findings? Thanks!
You won't get a straight answer. The GDS results posted earlier are not accurate.
I heard that GDS is having a very good year so far. Sidwell, not so much.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Being a legacy is an enormous advantage. It gets kids admitted to schools that otherwise would not seriously consider them.
What you describe may have been true decades ago, but is no longer accurate in 2018. The applicant pools are way bigger now.
Legacies who are admitted, but they were already qualified on the merits and the legacy status was the tiebreaker in their favor. The notion that today's legacy applicants are somehow less qualified is a myth. This isn't to say that they didn't benefit, but on paper, they were almost certainly worthy of admission. There are too many qualified applicants vying for basically the same number of spots as when we were kids, and legacy status is one of the few ways to break ties or make close calls.
this is just wrong. seriously, go read up on the harvard suit. i mean, we don't have to speculate or surmise. the admissions folks talk about what a big deal it is if you're a legacy.
"But Harvard has not disputed the preference given to legacy students. A 2013 internal study, made public in the Friday documents, found a strong positive association between legacy status and an individual applicant’s odds of admission.
Dean of Admissions and Financial Aid William R. Fitzsimmons ’67 previously defended the “tip” he says his office gives to legacy applicants—which he described in a 2011 interview as a “self-selecting group.”
“If you look at the credentials of Harvard alumni and alumnae sons and daughters, they are better candidates on average,” Fitzsimmons said. “Very few who apply have no chance of getting in.”
Harvard spokesperson Rachael Dane referred to a statement on the Admissions Office website about whether likelihood of admission is “enhanced if a relative has attended Harvard.”
“The application process is the same for all candidates,” the statement reads. “Among a group of similarly distinguished applicants, the daughters and sons of Harvard College alumni/ae may receive an additional look.”
Yes - it's a big deal. Yes - it helps immensely. But, you are taking the one fact we know, which is the legacy admit rate, and then assuming everything else. The lawsuit presented ZERO information on the point you are making - which is that legacy admits are less qualified.
Your quote says what most data has shown... legacies are usually more qualified than the average candidate. See above.
Also, not true. You're skipping the parts about the "Z List," the "Dean's Interest List," etc. The Boston Globe describes the Z List thusly:
"They are predominantly (70 percent) white students, and nearly half have parents who attended Harvard. Just a few are economically disadvantaged, and nearly 60 percent are drawn from a special list kept by the dean that includes children of significant donors and potential donors. As a group, their test scores and academic records fall somewhere in between students who were rejected from Harvard and those who got in."
Fair enough. About 50-60 students get in off the Z list per year so we’re taking about 25-30 legacy kids. Out of 2000 admitted students. 1.5% of overall admits and less than 5% of the legacy pool. Interesting but not significant
Schools would be a whole lot less white without legacies. Compare Harvard's student body to Cal Tech. It's hardly insignificant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Being a legacy is an enormous advantage. It gets kids admitted to schools that otherwise would not seriously consider them.
What you describe may have been true decades ago, but is no longer accurate in 2018. The applicant pools are way bigger now.
Legacies who are admitted, but they were already qualified on the merits and the legacy status was the tiebreaker in their favor. The notion that today's legacy applicants are somehow less qualified is a myth. This isn't to say that they didn't benefit, but on paper, they were almost certainly worthy of admission. There are too many qualified applicants vying for basically the same number of spots as when we were kids, and legacy status is one of the few ways to break ties or make close calls.
this is just wrong. seriously, go read up on the harvard suit. i mean, we don't have to speculate or surmise. the admissions folks talk about what a big deal it is if you're a legacy.
"But Harvard has not disputed the preference given to legacy students. A 2013 internal study, made public in the Friday documents, found a strong positive association between legacy status and an individual applicant’s odds of admission.
Dean of Admissions and Financial Aid William R. Fitzsimmons ’67 previously defended the “tip” he says his office gives to legacy applicants—which he described in a 2011 interview as a “self-selecting group.”
“If you look at the credentials of Harvard alumni and alumnae sons and daughters, they are better candidates on average,” Fitzsimmons said. “Very few who apply have no chance of getting in.”
Harvard spokesperson Rachael Dane referred to a statement on the Admissions Office website about whether likelihood of admission is “enhanced if a relative has attended Harvard.”
“The application process is the same for all candidates,” the statement reads. “Among a group of similarly distinguished applicants, the daughters and sons of Harvard College alumni/ae may receive an additional look.”
Yes - it's a big deal. Yes - it helps immensely. But, you are taking the one fact we know, which is the legacy admit rate, and then assuming everything else. The lawsuit presented ZERO information on the point you are making - which is that legacy admits are less qualified.
Your quote says what most data has shown... legacies are usually more qualified than the average candidate. See above.
Also, not true. You're skipping the parts about the "Z List," the "Dean's Interest List," etc. The Boston Globe describes the Z List thusly:
"They are predominantly (70 percent) white students, and nearly half have parents who attended Harvard. Just a few are economically disadvantaged, and nearly 60 percent are drawn from a special list kept by the dean that includes children of significant donors and potential donors. As a group, their test scores and academic records fall somewhere in between students who were rejected from Harvard and those who got in."
Fair enough. About 50-60 students get in off the Z list per year so we’re taking about 25-30 legacy kids. Out of 2000 admitted students. 1.5% of overall admits and less than 5% of the legacy pool. Interesting but not significant
Schools would be a whole lot less white without legacies. Compare Harvard's student body to Cal Tech. It's hardly insignificant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Being a legacy is an enormous advantage. It gets kids admitted to schools that otherwise would not seriously consider them.
What you describe may have been true decades ago, but is no longer accurate in 2018. The applicant pools are way bigger now.
Legacies who are admitted, but they were already qualified on the merits and the legacy status was the tiebreaker in their favor. The notion that today's legacy applicants are somehow less qualified is a myth. This isn't to say that they didn't benefit, but on paper, they were almost certainly worthy of admission. There are too many qualified applicants vying for basically the same number of spots as when we were kids, and legacy status is one of the few ways to break ties or make close calls.
this is just wrong. seriously, go read up on the harvard suit. i mean, we don't have to speculate or surmise. the admissions folks talk about what a big deal it is if you're a legacy.
"But Harvard has not disputed the preference given to legacy students. A 2013 internal study, made public in the Friday documents, found a strong positive association between legacy status and an individual applicant’s odds of admission.
Dean of Admissions and Financial Aid William R. Fitzsimmons ’67 previously defended the “tip” he says his office gives to legacy applicants—which he described in a 2011 interview as a “self-selecting group.”
“If you look at the credentials of Harvard alumni and alumnae sons and daughters, they are better candidates on average,” Fitzsimmons said. “Very few who apply have no chance of getting in.”
Harvard spokesperson Rachael Dane referred to a statement on the Admissions Office website about whether likelihood of admission is “enhanced if a relative has attended Harvard.”
“The application process is the same for all candidates,” the statement reads. “Among a group of similarly distinguished applicants, the daughters and sons of Harvard College alumni/ae may receive an additional look.”
Yes - it's a big deal. Yes - it helps immensely. But, you are taking the one fact we know, which is the legacy admit rate, and then assuming everything else. The lawsuit presented ZERO information on the point you are making - which is that legacy admits are less qualified.
Your quote says what most data has shown... legacies are usually more qualified than the average candidate. See above.
Also, not true. You're skipping the parts about the "Z List," the "Dean's Interest List," etc. The Boston Globe describes the Z List thusly:
"They are predominantly (70 percent) white students, and nearly half have parents who attended Harvard. Just a few are economically disadvantaged, and nearly 60 percent are drawn from a special list kept by the dean that includes children of significant donors and potential donors. As a group, their test scores and academic records fall somewhere in between students who were rejected from Harvard and those who got in."
Fair enough. About 50-60 students get in off the Z list per year so we’re taking about 25-30 legacy kids. Out of 2000 admitted students. 1.5% of overall admits and less than 5% of the legacy pool. Interesting but not significant
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe results were lost somewhere in this thread for SFS...but I have not seen any posters responding to what the EA/ED results were for SFS. Can someone post their findings? Thanks!
You won't get a straight answer. The GDS results posted earlier are not accurate.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe results were lost somewhere in this thread for SFS...but I have not seen any posters responding to what the EA/ED results were for SFS. Can someone post their findings? Thanks!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t think anyone is in denial. Most of the posters say it helps. It’s a question of whether you can draw any general conclusions about the legacy pool or claim that you must be hooked to be admitted.
Exactly. It's the folks dismissing certain admit as merely "legacies" who are, without any evidence, implying that these students were somehow less qualified or deserving on the merits. When in fact the opposite is generally true.
There are certain similarities and dissimilarities between a track race and vying for admission to highly selective schools. In both cases many worthy candidates are competing with one another. There are a limited number of prizes in track and seats in Freshman class. On an oval track it appears as though, as you go from the outermost to the innermost lane, each runner has longer distance to run than the runners in the inner lanes. But we know all runners have exactly the same distance to run. Whereas, in the case of admissions, all candidates compete on a straight-line path not oval. But certain considerations such as politically connected, large donations, recruited athlete, affirmative action, legacy, under-represented geographic locations/ethnicity/whether LGBTQ or straight etc. will place such applicants at various distances closer to the finish line (admission offer) than applicants having no such qualifiers. If we are to go by the plaintiff's arguments in Harvard University admissions case, Asian American applicants are placed behind the start line (similar to a track runner having to carry extra weights for the race).
Of course, not all legacies get admitted. That doesn't mean legacy status doesn't get bonus points. Just because a legacy student didn't get admitted to the legacy school but admitted to a similarly selective school in the area doesn't mean the legacy school didn't give bonus points to the student. One can try to convince oneself by saying that legacy has no role in their or their children's admission but they can not fool their conscience.
Consider this change to your analogy: The race begins with a lot of lanes and you have to meet a minimum to get into the race at all. Each lane is labeled with a need the school might have and applicants can run in every lane for which they qualify (you clone yourself). There is a lane for Z listers, one for development cases, one for one-of-a-kind superstar pointy kids, general legacies, first in family to college, each sport, each instrument, theater, a lane for each gender, race, ethnicity, and an international lane, lanes for hard to find academic credentials for specialized majors, the general academic lane and the also rans. In some lanes, you have to line up according to ability, such as the sports lane, gender lane, race lanes, or the general academic lane.
Some lanes will be much more crowed than others making it difficult to be the one who makes it to the finish line in that lane. If your lane has very few kids and much University need, you are pretty much guaranteed to get in. If you are the front of your lane, or near the front of several lanes, again, excellent odds. Along the way, they also cut people from the back of various lanes as they can see there are just too many people ahead of them in the same lane or same combination of lanes for them to have any hope of making it to the end of the race (i.e., being one of 3000 white, male, non-recruited soccer players with great academics isn't really helpful).
Also, for starters they have to take x number from the sport, instrument, theater, and specialty academic lanes to run those programs, so those lanes start the race and cross the finish line first. After that, the lanes start to merge, and those who were in multiple lanes have a better chance of being further ahead in at least one of their lanes which will put them further ahead at the merge, plus they will take up more room as their personal clones from the other lanes join them (i.e., the well-rounded kid start to gain traction at this stage after the pointy kids are already in). As the race moves on, the number of lanes narrows until finally the remaining lane is really crowded, and giant well-rounded kids are taking up a lot of room and elbowing out others at the front of the academic pack.
There isn't room at the finish line for everyone. And if there is really nothing to distinguish you from a whole bunch of other similar people, you will get lost in the back of the pack.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t think anyone is in denial. Most of the posters say it helps. It’s a question of whether you can draw any general conclusions about the legacy pool or claim that you must be hooked to be admitted.
Exactly. It's the folks dismissing certain admit as merely "legacies" who are, without any evidence, implying that these students were somehow less qualified or deserving on the merits. When in fact the opposite is generally true.
There are certain similarities and dissimilarities between a track race and vying for admission to highly selective schools. In both cases many worthy candidates are competing with one another. There are a limited number of prizes in track and seats in Freshman class. On an oval track it appears as though, as you go from the outermost to the innermost lane, each runner has longer distance to run than the runners in the inner lanes. But we know all runners have exactly the same distance to run. Whereas, in the case of admissions, all candidates compete on a straight-line path not oval. But certain considerations such as politically connected, large donations, recruited athlete, affirmative action, legacy, under-represented geographic locations/ethnicity/whether LGBTQ or straight etc. will place such applicants at various distances closer to the finish line (admission offer) than applicants having no such qualifiers. If we are to go by the plaintiff's arguments in Harvard University admissions case, Asian American applicants are placed behind the start line (similar to a track runner having to carry extra weights for the race).
Of course, not all legacies get admitted. That doesn't mean legacy status doesn't get bonus points. Just because a legacy student didn't get admitted to the legacy school but admitted to a similarly selective school in the area doesn't mean the legacy school didn't give bonus points to the student. One can try to convince oneself by saying that legacy has no role in their or their children's admission but they can not fool their conscience.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Meh, many if not most of the legacies would've gotten in on their own merits without it -- maybe not EA/ED but eventually.
I doubt this. Very much.
Anonymous wrote:https://www.insidehighered.com/admissions/article/2017/08/21/data-provide-insights-advantages-and-qualifications-legacy-applicants
Off-topic, but Naviance data for 2014-2017 show that 48% of admitted legacies are in the mid-50% range for test scores at their chosen college, 34% are above and 18% are below the mid-range (and probably some of those have another hook as well).
Anonymous wrote:Reread the thread carefully with open mind and try to discern what is between the lines. You will get it. Just a little patience and due diligence will reveal what you are asking.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds about right for at least one third
Meh, many if not most of the legacies would've gotten in on their own merits without it -- maybe not EA/ED but eventually.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Being full pay and/or a legacy is what gets your kid into a top school, not because they're particularly smart. Going to a Big 3 private signals full pay.
At Harvard,33% of the class is legacy. and "approximately 70 percent of our students receive some form of aid, and about 60 percent receive need–based scholarships and pay an average of $12,000 per year. Twenty percent of parents pay nothing".
Please do the math on this and justify your statement.