It's a myth that the admission policies of these (private) schools have ever been objective College admissions at highly selective schools have always been a largely subjective process. Ivy-plus schools have always weighed College admissions at highly selective schools have always been a subjective process, with factors like family connections and donations, etc. ... so factoring equitable or holistic admissions are just different subjective practices adding to the historically subjective admissions policies of highly selective schools.
Well Craig, I think you just saved me $85. I had Duke on my daughter’s potential reach list, along with UVA. But I think her case won’t be compelling to either institution. We will just save those dollars. Two less apps
Duke would like applicants to submit 90 second videos of themselves. Admissions Officer actually mentioned "especially since the SCOTUS decision decision, the videos will be helpful"
Why a school might want to select a student with a 1290 Sat score over one with a 1590 makes a ton of sense. The only purpose of test scores is to give schools a sense of how academically prepared a student might be in having their school's rigor. 1290 may be a sufficient score to indicate that a student can thrive academically if admitted. So a school like Duke might find that they'd rather accept a student with a 1290 who also has a compelling background, excelled in a rigorous HS courseload, has some sort of "wow factor" and plans to study a major that is less impacted .....over a student with a 1290 with great stats, a decent essay, standard extracurriculars, ... who intends to study a major that is highly impacted like Pre-med or CS etc
its unlikely that you would get a 1290 if you EXCELLED at a rigorous high school. makes sense to get a 1290 while excelling at heavily grade inflated/underrepresented high school
@@bhargavnemani2485 It's not unlikely at all as many students get scores in the range who then might take the test 3 or 4 more times to get in the 1500 range. If it is true though that the HS a student attends can play a part in deciding what level of test score they achieve that is an unquotable dynamic that indicates es how unfair the standardized testing process can be-- making Dude policy very understandable;
@@手笨也得吃饭 Yes, from someone who understands that the SAT is largely a profit-driven nonsense-oriented racket that is best at measuring a student's test prep resources.
I can see why this consultant feels threatened by the changes that top schools are confronted with, especially AI. There fewer and fewer easy ways to parse equity/inequity.
There is no way to reliably determine if AI was used to write an essay any more than you can tell if a highly educated adult wrote the essay. This insistence to base admissions decisions around essays is nonsensical. Just take away their non-profit tax status and let them continue to do as they please with admissions so long as they start paying their share of taxes. Taxes that can then be used to reduce costs at State Schools where this agenda based admissions tactics should be disallowed. Exactly how much in taxes would the asset management business at Harvard pay with their $50 billion dollar "endowment?"
It was always a myth that colleges were objectively evaluating candidates on merit. This allows them to do what they want to do. There are apps that can evaluate if an essay was AI generated. The take on scores is interesting, especially given many ivys are no longer test optional and the data for scores is so compelling. Oh well, Duke has great athletics 😂
Duke is ranked too high in recent years, which is ridiculous! (Baseball made it higher rank?) The school was shut down twice in its history. Good kids don't want to go Duke.
This may be the most uninformed, ignorant and downright stupid comment on the internet. "Baseball made it higher rank". This is not a complete sentence. In any event, it may be basketball rather than baseball which is the focus of your incomplete sentence. "Duke was shut down twice in its history"? What detached from reality island in space are you living on? "Good kids don't want to go to Duke"? This little nugget of knowledge from you may be true. Absolutely fantastic kids want to go to Duke. Just "good" is not enough. If you ever get your facts straight, perhaps you can try to comment on the internet again. Until then, your posting a comment just gives viewers the (likely correct) impression that you are a complete fool.
It's a myth that the admission policies of these (private) schools have ever been objective College admissions at highly selective schools have always been a largely subjective process. Ivy-plus schools have always weighed College admissions at highly selective schools have always been a subjective process, with factors like family connections and donations, etc. ... so factoring equitable or holistic admissions are just different subjective practices adding to the historically subjective admissions policies of highly selective schools.
The essays have no real value since there is no way to tell who/what wrote it.
Well Craig, I think you just saved me $85. I had Duke on my daughter’s potential reach list, along with UVA. But I think her case won’t be compelling to either institution. We will just save those dollars. Two less apps
why are you handling your DAUGHTER's list...?
@@BlahblAHbLaH-1_ she’s a sophomore so it’s not final. But teens need guidance. Plus Im paying for it
check to see if her school has fee waivers
Duke would like applicants to submit 90 second videos of themselves. Admissions Officer actually mentioned "especially since the SCOTUS decision decision, the videos will be helpful"
Welcome to Studio 54...umm...I mean Duke University. Good luck!
Please, they want the flexibility to admit legacy no matter what. It’s that simple.
Crazy. Not considering Duke.
That may be a wise decision for you.
Why a school might want to select a student with a 1290 Sat score over one with a 1590 makes a ton of sense. The only purpose of test scores is to give schools a sense of how academically prepared a student might be in having their school's rigor. 1290 may be a sufficient score to indicate that a student can thrive academically if admitted. So a school like Duke might find that they'd rather accept a student with a 1290 who also has a compelling background, excelled in a rigorous HS courseload, has some sort of "wow factor" and plans to study a major that is less impacted .....over a student with a 1290 with great stats, a decent essay, standard extracurriculars, ... who intends to study a major that is highly impacted like Pre-med or CS etc
its unlikely that you would get a 1290 if you EXCELLED at a rigorous high school. makes sense to get a 1290 while excelling at heavily grade inflated/underrepresented high school
@@bhargavnemani2485 It's not unlikely at all as many students get scores in the range who then might take the test 3 or 4 more times to get in the 1500 range. If it is true though that the HS a student attends can play a part in deciding what level of test score they achieve that is an unquotable dynamic that indicates es how unfair the standardized testing process can be-- making Dude policy very understandable;
This nonsense can only come from someone get 1290...
@@手笨也得吃饭 Yes, from someone who understands that the SAT is largely a profit-driven nonsense-oriented racket that is best at measuring a student's test prep resources.
Athletes and legacies
So Duke is trying to work around the Supreme Court decision?
I can see why this consultant feels threatened by the changes that top schools are confronted with, especially AI. There fewer and fewer easy ways to parse equity/inequity.
There is no way to reliably determine if AI was used to write an essay any more than you can tell if a highly educated adult wrote the essay. This insistence to base admissions decisions around essays is nonsensical.
Just take away their non-profit tax status and let them continue to do as they please with admissions so long as they start paying their share of taxes. Taxes that can then be used to reduce costs at State Schools where this agenda based admissions tactics should be disallowed. Exactly how much in taxes would the asset management business at Harvard pay with their $50 billion dollar "endowment?"
It was always a myth that colleges were objectively evaluating candidates on merit. This allows them to do what they want to do. There are apps that can evaluate if an essay was AI generated. The take on scores is interesting, especially given many ivys are no longer test optional and the data for scores is so compelling. Oh well, Duke has great athletics 😂
You are missing what Duke is doing here.
Duke is ranked too high in recent years, which is ridiculous! (Baseball made it higher rank?) The school was shut down twice in its history. Good kids don't want to go Duke.
This may be the most uninformed, ignorant and downright stupid comment on the internet. "Baseball made it higher rank". This is not a complete sentence. In any event, it may be basketball rather than baseball which is the focus of your incomplete sentence. "Duke was shut down twice in its history"? What detached from reality island in space are you living on? "Good kids don't want to go to Duke"? This little nugget of knowledge from you may be true. Absolutely fantastic kids want to go to Duke. Just "good" is not enough. If you ever get your facts straight, perhaps you can try to comment on the internet again. Until then, your posting a comment just gives viewers the (likely correct) impression that you are a complete fool.