ORD_Buckeye
Wrong glass, Sir.
Jagdaddy;882157; said:I may be able to offer some anecdotal perspective here: I went to OSU from 1987-1991, right as the move towards more selectivity was beginning and definitely went to school with some kids who probably didn't belong at any University, much less OSU, and vanished fairly rapidly from the campus. We definitely need selectivity, and I agree with the overall direction in which things are going On the other hand, as a bright but socially inept and immature kid with high standardized test scores but a mediocre 3.0 in high school, I only got into OSU (and thank God was allowed entry to the honors program on the basis of test scores alone), where I promptly grew up, took a ton of honors classes, graduated in four years with a double major and a bit better than a 3.4 GPA, and went on to an Ivy League Law School (all at a bargain price :)) Tibor's professed, though likely only semi-believed, view of alumni notwithstanding, I feel like tOSU taking a chance on me was quite possibly the single most important thing that's happened to me and sometimes wonder what would have happened if they hadn't. Accordingly, I hope they don't take things so far for the sake of rankings that they don't leave some wiggle room for some of the later bloomers that can show some evidence of potential.
Now having said that, there's no doubt that the smarter the kids around you are, the more you can learn about how tough the competition out there really can be. At the time, even the honors program at tOSU didn't fully prepare me for the competition I encountered in law school, although I'll bet it would do better now as admissions have gotten much tougher.
Insightful post, Jag. I was at Ohio State roughly the same period as you, and I was continually amazed by the gap between the top 10% of the student body and the bottom 10%. I doubt any university in the country had such a differential. My concern is not with those students who gained admittance solely because of open admissions. I knew several that were great guys but even then I thought, in the back of my head, that they shouldn't be here. I think the more meaningful debate is about kids who have records similar to yours--B students with strong test scores. As strongly supportive as I am about selective admission, I have to admit that--in the back of my head--I do wonder about future Ivy League law students, Fortune 500 CEOs and US Senators that might get shut out of Ohio State and shunted off to one of the Fredo schools.
An interesting aside is that I too was in the honors program then, but now would almost certainly have to earn my way in my freshman year. You pretty much have to be a class valedictorian with 30+ ACT scores to get pre-enrolled these days.
Oh well, Stephanie left for a business meeting in Tokyo today; I'm on my fourth Old Style; I've got Chicken Cacciatore on the stove and a bottle of Barbaresco breathing--and Entourage is about start. I'm out.
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