<p>Of course! But how do we define “less qualified?” Is the daughter of an illegal immigrant who has spent her formative years in Mexico or moving from one mediocre school to another only to end up being valedictorian in her high school less qualified than a a Plano High Senior who is ranked 12th in his class. What if their SAT scores fall within 3-5% on one another all the while the Valley girl who believes Karen Dillard is related to the department store she once visited? </p>
<p>Fwiw, it is easier to talk about those “non qualified” students that really find supporting data that confirms our “worse fears” of reverse discrimination. How many students are there in the top 10% who are really set up for failure? How many fail to reach 900 on the SAT among the top 10% and … the others? The answer is 3 percent versus … 2%. Same statistic for studentx who cannot crack 1000: 7% versus … 5%. How do those same group do GPA wise? Below 900: 2.27 versus 2.34 and below 1000: 2.57 to 2.15. Above 1000, the top 10% does better than non-top 10% in every subgroup. </p>
<p>Again, the “facts” that will meet much approval at any Starbucks in Highland Park, Plano, or any suburban mecca in Texas are hardly supported by the data compiled in Austin. This does not mean that the myths of unqualified students robbing academic superstars who happen to live in the wrong zip codes will stop anytime soon. Not much different from the tales of academic or athletic scholarships at the Ivies!</p>
<p>Although, if you look at page 2 and compare the chart with 2003 numbers and text with 2006-07 numbers, UT remedial courses do seem to be on the rise.</p>
<p>Still, it is a fact that the mean SAT score of the top-ten percent freshman has been lower than the non-top-ten percent freshmen since 2003, and that doesn’t help quiet the complaints.</p>
<p>Well, that will teach me to go off on just the basis of an Austin news report that
<br>
Seems it would only be for state university/ top 10% rules, not requiring every district to follow it for all their students. Ok, in the words of Gilda Radner “Oh, never mind…”</p>
<p>“What if the kids in the top 10% of the less able high schools really aren’t up to snuff academically? Should they be destroyed by going to schools they can’t handle?”</p>
<p>Only problem is that there is not a shred of evidence for this alleged “what if”. Graduation rates at UT have not declined. The only thing that may have changed is that some few students are headed to Louisiana, Oklahoma, and California (states one poster) so they don’t have to mix with the riff-raff. I say good riddance.</p>
<p>Who exactly said they were going out of state to avoid “mixing with the riff-raff” ? Did I miss a big part of this thread?<br>
Yes, nearby states (mostly Oklahoma) are sucking up the smart kids who didn’t get into our top schools, but who says they go there to “avoid mixing with riff’raff” I don’t want to go out on a limb - data points please?</p>
<p>I agree, dragon. It is easy to be flip about this when you don’t have any skin in the game. We’re just are talking about 17 and 18 year olds who just want to attend a University in their own community that is commensurate with their academic qualifications.</p>
<p>In reading the attachment explaining the two different methodologies that are being discussed, in either case it would hurt kids in my district vs. other districts.</p>
<p>In our district you can only get credit for 4 units of AP, preAP, honors, what-have-you, each semester, so the kids who want to take those classes end up taking them in English, Math, Science and Social Studies. There are very few offered outside of those subjects - no stat, no psych, no art history, etc. There is 1 extra AP you can take - AP Spanish, but since you would receive no honors credit for it, many elect to just take Spanish 4 (I would hardly call that gaming the system;)). </p>
<p>So, the kids in my district would automatically, by the reason of not having the same number of AP courses available to them, be at a distinct numerical disadvantage to kids in districts where they can take 5 or more AP’s per semester. </p>
<p>Should that mean that henceforth, from the 2009 admission year, noone from our entire district can get into UT or A&M? Or should it mean that our district, based upon the new methodology of gpa calculation, should have the chance, by the 2012 admission year, to begin offering more advanced courses so that we can be on a level field with other districts?</p>
<p>It would sure be a bummer for the kids who will be seniors in the fall of 2009 (i.e. my son) who took the prescribed courses in our district, the maximum number of AP/honors that he could possibly take, to be told that he doesn’t measure up to somebody who had the opportunity to take more.</p>
<p>One thing the law 10% does is somewhat equalize the opportunities for students. We all know that education in this state is very unlevel at the high school level. Robin Hood didn’t even start to give all high school students the same educational opportunities. Should students from high schools that don’t have AP courses, don’t even have Trig in many cases, continue to be penalized by locking them out of the state flagship universities? Many of these students do just fine once given the opportunity. As Xiggi, Mini, and others have pointed out, UT should not ever become the bastion of Highland Park, Plano, and other elite school districts that have deep pockets and affluent students. </p>
<p>As for the GPA law, gaming the system was never a good plan. As long as the system is the same for all, it’s an improvement over what we had.</p>
<p>But, it isn’t the same for all. Until every district has the same number of AP/IB courses avaiable, it cannot be when they are planning on weighting AP/IB. At least our district has 4 per semester - maybe that will put them somewhere in the middle. For districts that have 0 AP, what happens to those kids?</p>
<p>They need to do some more thinking on this thing. Until educational opportunities are equal, the methods they are discussing (in calculating GPA) will be unequal and patently unfair to those in districts that either just don’t have AP courses available, or just plain can’t afford to make them available.</p>
<p>Unless I am missing something it seems that what aggravates parents the most is that the rules would be changed without proper warning and would be retroactive. </p>
<p>However, how could anyone possibly know that the new rules are bad AND would be applied retroactively? Did the responsible parties not agree to postpone the implementation of this “new law” until 2012? Do we know if the admission officers will compare students across districts or not? Do we know how extensive is the use of AP courses in the lower performing districts? </p>
<p>Fwiw, I wonder what the reaction of parents who are upset about this proposed change in GPAs would be if the 10% rule would be abandoned altogether or changed substantially? As we know, there have been repeated attempts to do just that. </p>
<p>So, what good would all the shenanigans and jockeying for the right GPA boost mean if there were NO 10% rule and the entire class would be selected according to the holistic review. This would, of course, mean that UT would probably INCREASE its geographical and racial diversity targets. </p>
<p>Anyone who believes that UT is complaining about the growing number of automatic admissions because they’d prefer to increase the numbers from Plano or Highland Park and reduce the numbers from poorer districts is probably mistaken. </p>
<p>Consider the current 10% rule a gift to the wealthy districts; not a hindrance! It won’t last forever and the new format will be less charitable to the schools that have been the primary beneficiaries to date (and used the largest portion of their “quota.”)</p>
<p>I am so intrigued by this whole issue that I called an official with a state education agency. What I was told is that, as the above link states, the legislation was designed to be for higher education institutions only but the legislation will create a domino effect down to districts and schools as they try to ensure their kids get a fair shake under this new law.</p>
<p>ag is right above. This change will hurt students in poorer districts where there may be no AP or IB choices that allow those students to get the extra weight. In effect, it becomes a statewide top 10% rather than a school-by-school top 10%. Now, the cynical among us will say, “Those hideous suburban parents have found a way to get more of their little darlings into UT.” More charitably, you might say that this will force the hand of all districts/schools to raise their standards and offer the more rigorous curricula, ultimately benefitting those kids and making it more likely that they can handle collge-level courses.</p>
<p>So, according to this (from last April’s report), the legislature has ruled that it be implemented by the 2009 school year. The committe wants to push the date to 2012, but it will have to be changed by the legislature, Paredes vows to work with them on the date change (good luck;)).</p>
<p>The other beauty is (from the June 27th report):</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>In other words, “what the heck are we supposed to tell parents in the fall/winter of 2008, regarding a statewide policy that will affect ALL kids in the state starting with the fall of 2009 college admits, when we don’t even know what the policy will be or how it will be implemented?”</p>
<p>YIKES! You’d think the legislature would stop and say, “Maybe we should postpone this until we have all our ducks in a row.”</p>
<p>But, for those of us this past year, who have been trying to figure out how to pay the new franchise taxes (due Dec. 31st) when they hadn’t even been finalized and explained until AFTER the deadline, we know not to put too much faith in the intelligence of our legislators.</p>
<p>However, why should we think that “In effect, it becomes a statewide top 10% rather than a school-by-school top 10%.” might ever become true? </p>
<p>Does the proposed legislation specifically proposed that the current 10% of each HS in Texas becomes a 10% of the entire state? Based on the history of the 588 and the mutiple attempts to modify it, I really do not see that being remotely impossible. </p>
<p>So, how do you read this? I can’t stand legislativese, so I might be missing something, but I don’t see anything that says that these numbers will be calculated on a school-by-school basis as is done now.</p>
<p>What I read it as saying is that all Texas high schools will be required to compute grade point averages based on the method proscribed in Rule 51.807 a 4 point scale with weighted grades for honors/ap/ib/dual credit.</p>
<p>Of course, here’s a kicker:</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>which is why in the last meeting the THECB is only saying AP and IB because they cannot investigate every school program to find out the relative “academic rigor” of the honors/dual credit classes statewide.</p>
<p>It won’t be a “state-wide” top 10% but, if you go to a school with fewer ap and no IB courses, your GPA will be lower than someone who had to opportunity to load their schedules with ap/ib weighted classes. </p>
<p>I think, after reading this, that you will still be “ranked” within your own hs though, so your ranking will reflect how you did relative to other students within your own school who had access to the same number of weighted classes as you.</p>
<p>ziggy says: “This would, of course, mean that UT would probably INCREASE its geographical and racial diversity targets.”</p>
<p>I’ve never heard anyone say that UT sets geographical diversity targets. All the material on the Admissions website addresses is racial and ethnic targets - at least as far back as 2000. Nor have I ever heard that UT wants to reduce admissions from “over represented schools” as someone mentioned. I don’t believe UT, as an institution, has the same motives as the legislature in this regard.</p>
<p>What do you think would happen, if UT would be able to cap the 10% rule to 50% of the entering class or to reduce the 10% number to 7% or 5%? Where do you think the reductions would have the biggest impact? In the rural and impoverished areas of Texas that send far fewer students that they could if they were to use their full quotas of ten percenters or … in the suburban schools that send larger number of students? </p>
<p>Why do you think that Royce West seeks the support of elected officials from rural areas every time “someone” from Plano tries to undo the 10% law?</p>