Nation
World
Politics
Sports
Business
Entertainment
Life
Tech
Science
Opinion
Crime
Health
Oddities

Ban or Embrace? Colleges Wrestle With A.I.-Generated Admissions Essays.

Por: The New York Times Tech September 01, 2023

thumbnail

Rick Clark, the executive director of undergraduate admission at the Georgia Institute of Technology, and his staff spent weeks this summer pretending to be high school students using A.I. chatbots to fill out college applications.The admissions officers each took on a different high school persona: swim team captain, Eagle Scout, musical theater performer. Then they fed personal details about the fictional students into ChatGPT, prompting the... + full article



Similar News

Harvard's legacy admissions hit with federal civil rights probe

New York Daily News USA Politics July 25, 2023

thumbnailThe federal government has launched a civil rights probe into Harvard University’s use of legacy admissions, the U.S. Department of Education said Tuesday, increasing pressure on universities already grappling with intense backlash to the practice. The disclosure arrived three... + más

Healthy Mayfield 'rolling with the punches' as QB2 | ESPN

Panthers' Baker Mayfield 'rolling with the punches' as QB2 | ABC News


Affirmative action is out in higher education. What comes next for college admissions?

The Boston Globe USA Nation June 30, 2023

thumbnailColleges across the country will be forced to stop considering race in admissions under Thursday’s Supreme Court ruling, ending affirmative action policies that date back decades.Schools that have relied on race-conscious admissions policies to build diversity will have to... + más

High school scores and top performers from Friday, March 24 | Orlando Sentinel

High school scores and top performers from Tuesday, March 28 | Orlando Sentinel


Affirmative action is gone. Can personal essays help diversify universities?

The Boston Globe USA Opinion June 29, 2023

thumbnailFor many college admissions officers, the personal essays that students submit are the most resonant part of an application.While the rigor of applicants’ high school courses and their grades are typically what admissions officers consider first — especially at the most... + más

Council Post: Why We Still Need Affirmative Action, Especially In The Workplace | Forbes

Opinion | The New York Times


Colleges will be able to block out a student’s race on admissions applications

The Boston Globe USA Nation May 27, 2023

thumbnailEach year, the 1 million or so students applying to college through the Common App are given the option to check a box, disclosing whether they identify as Hispanic, Asian, Black or white, among other choices.Now, with the US Supreme Court expected to rule soon against... + más

Legacy College Admissions Come Under Fire In New Report | Forbes

Colleges Will Be Able to Hide a Student’s Race on Admissions Applications | The New York Times


Colleges Will Be Able to Hide a Student’s Race on Admissions Applications

The New York Times USA Nation May 26, 2023

thumbnailEach year, the million or so students applying to college through the Common App are given the option to check a box, disclosing whether they identify as Hispanic, Asian, Black or white, among other choices.Now, with the U.S. Supreme Court expected to rule soon against... + más

How college admissions will change without affirmative action | 10 WBNS

Affirmative action is out in higher education. What comes next for college admissions? | The Boston Globe


NFL, '60 Minutes,' 'Big Bang Theory' top weekly ratings

Orlando Sentinel USA Entertainment April 17, 2023

thumbnailIn the first week of a new TV season, football was the top draw in prime time and a huge driver of viewers. The NFL provided the most-watched telecast on Sunday and Thursday. CBS’ NFL coverage on Sunday – which started outside prime time -- averaged 20.7 million viewers in... + más

Did Martha Washington really name a cat after Alexander Hamilton? | The Boston Globe

'Frustration' fuels Broncos' sideline blowup in loss | ESPN


A Computer Can Now Write Your College Essay — Maybe Better Than You Can

Forbes USA Business December 09, 2022

thumbnailWe fed ChatGPT, OpenAI’s new natural language tool, college essay questions for the 2022-2023 academic year. Here’s what it wrote. , called ChatGPT, to the public last week. With a simple log in, , and, unlike its predecessor InstructGPT, ChatGPT can answer follow-up... + más

Former SpaceX employee alleges age discrimination in complaint | Los Angeles Times

The Humanities Are About to Be Turned Upside Down | The Atlantic



About iurex | Privacy Policy | Disclaimer |