<div>http://www.fromtherumbleseat.com/2011/6/7/2212645/recruiting-at-georgia-tech</div><div>
</div><div>the tone of this article really pisses me off.</div><div>
</div><div>i don't think anyone would argue that the sec has the academic standards of the acc. however, i do find the numbers suspicious that 25% of msu's students were top 10% in HS, but only 28% were top 25% in HS. so only 3% of our students were between 11% and 25% in HS? that just seems suspiciously low. and consider that kids ranked 11%-25% probably aren't pulling big time out of state scholarships or private scholarships, but could get a little money form the state of MS to pay for some/most/all of the cheap in state rates at msu, and the numbers seem even more off. i could see 3% top 10% and 25% between 11% and 25% long before i could see the other way around, because the kids with top 10% grades and scores would be more likely to attract scholarships out of state.</div><div>
</div><div>also, worth noting that MS HSs tend to be smaller than most of the rest of the country simply because MS is undeniably a small town state. for a lot of schools, the top 10% may only comprise 5 or 6 students each year. whereas states with larger populations are gonna have 50, 75, 100+ kids in the top 10% of any given class. and a whole lot more HSs to pull in state students from.</div><div>
</div><div>whatever, the tone of the writer pissed me off and so i'm looking to poke any holes i can in his rant. </div>
</div><div>the tone of this article really pisses me off.</div><div>
</div><div>i don't think anyone would argue that the sec has the academic standards of the acc. however, i do find the numbers suspicious that 25% of msu's students were top 10% in HS, but only 28% were top 25% in HS. so only 3% of our students were between 11% and 25% in HS? that just seems suspiciously low. and consider that kids ranked 11%-25% probably aren't pulling big time out of state scholarships or private scholarships, but could get a little money form the state of MS to pay for some/most/all of the cheap in state rates at msu, and the numbers seem even more off. i could see 3% top 10% and 25% between 11% and 25% long before i could see the other way around, because the kids with top 10% grades and scores would be more likely to attract scholarships out of state.</div><div>
</div><div>also, worth noting that MS HSs tend to be smaller than most of the rest of the country simply because MS is undeniably a small town state. for a lot of schools, the top 10% may only comprise 5 or 6 students each year. whereas states with larger populations are gonna have 50, 75, 100+ kids in the top 10% of any given class. and a whole lot more HSs to pull in state students from.</div><div>
</div><div>whatever, the tone of the writer pissed me off and so i'm looking to poke any holes i can in his rant. </div>