TexasAg95 said:aggie93 said:TexasAg95 said:
One very simple thing that would thin the herd of top 10 and make things more fair for kids from tough high schools would be to one, institute a minimum SAT score for the top 10 percent, and two, bring back the academic auto admit (top quarter with a 1350.). My son was in the last group to get that and it was fair. He had a bad semester his sophomore year and blew his chance to be top 10. But he knew if he made a 1350 he'd get in. He busted his butt and got it.
The way admissions are now-
Top 10 at any school gets in , period.So what do we do?
- this results in a good chunk of kids who aren't going to succeed at A&M getting in automatically
- also results in a good chunk of kids who are just outside top 10 , who cant get in auto, but have what it takes to succeed at tamu
It's a big giant waste of time and energy but boy tamu gets to brag about "First Gen" and demographic numbers. Even though some of those kids shouldn't be here in the first place.
- set up a "PSA" and "Blinn team" program where the kids who SHOULD get in auto have to go , to wait for the kids in group one, the autos who really shouldn't be here, for them to flunk out and transfer.
Why is there room for thousands of students to transfer in to tamu every year, why is there enough room for them to guarantee PSA spots if the freshman class is full? Because they know a big chunk of the auto admits won't be able to cut it and will transfer out.
How about a goal of, choosing the kids who can succeed at A&M from the start , instead of this giant shell game of thousands getting admitted and then leaving and then thousands being put in PSA and then get in? Simply having a minimum SAT score to be top 10 auto would achieve this.
One issue is you would need the SAT to be higher. Over 400k grads from Texas high schools now and that doesn't count oos, homeschooling, or most private schools. Auto admissions really aren't practical anymore unless it's far higher than it is now like Top 5 percent of maybe Top 2 percent with a 1450 SAT. The solution is more holistic and then it's about what is prioritized.
You point out the problem with Blinn and System admits though. We should be doing it the opposite way but they care more about bragging about 1st gen and other numbers in admissions and less about outcomes and getting the best students. The reality is most 1st gen students from a bad school are set up to fail or have to overcome a lot to succeed. If those kids were in Blinn or System schools though they'd be more likely to graduate and do so with a meaningful degree. We aren't supposed to state the obvious though because it's much better to ignore uncomfortable truths.
I bet if you made top 10 percent simply need to make 1300, it would thin it considerably. Make it top 10 need to make 1300, top 25 need 1350 (old academic admit). That would free up a lot of spots for
"holistic" review.
Texas A&M is so difficult now, if a kid can't make a 1300 or something similar on the SAT, they are going to struggle.
And the thing is, like you said, the best thing for many of the "1st gen" freshmen would be to start at a smaller system school and see if they can handle college. If they can, great. Come on.
Problem is you would have far too many auto accepts and thus make it so that anyone who didn't get that rank and score is screwed. It needs to be higher for auto if we are doing auto. You don't want an "auto" that 50k students in Texas qualify for and we already have over 40k with Top 10%. Our peer schools don't do large scale auto admit for that reason. We are simply too strong of a school now. There is no easy button with auto admit and it's getting worse as Texas is over 31 million now.
Personally I think AP scores, esp in STEM subjects, are a better measure than an SAT. You aren't going to be able to get a 5 on Calc BC if you haven't studied and are really good at math. SAT mainly tests for IQ and test taking skills. Class rank and GPA Is simply too messy with thousands of high schools all with different levels and systems. That said there isn't a magic bullet in today's world and we need to look forward and look at what schools like Georgia Tech and Florida and others do. That's why you have to have a level of holistic. You want kids who pushed their rigor and still made grades. You want kids that can show on multiple levels they are prepared for A&M level coursework. We also should absolutely have each college admit students separately like we do for Engineering, especially Business. First come is an insane policy.
There are plenty of examples we can follow from our peer schools but A&M seems determined to do things differently and act as if that's always a good thing. All it does is limit us by losing out on many of the best students in Texas and frustrating former students. One thing I realized long ago was A&M has many policies that take former students and their die hard support for granted and they only change when they feel threatened. Lots of examples with Corps policies over the years as a great example. The school would take on policies to change things gradually and eventually they would go too far and get hit back by the big donors and shift back to an extent. Admissions is simply another battlefield but one that most former students don't understand as clearly. Hearing that the guy who runs admissions went the nontraditional route makes a lot of sense as he is looking at things through his own lens, the problem is that route doesn't work well for a school with the resources and prestige of A&M. Thus we get the less for more and frustrate almost everyone.
"The most terrifying words in the English language are: I'm from the government and I'm here to help."
Ronald Reagan
Ronald Reagan
