1. As part of its admissions procedures, the law school ranked all applicants on something known as the Texas Index, largely a product of grades and test scores. 2. At Stanford, all student applicants are ranked both academically and on their achievement outside the classroom, as well as other factors, such as their background. 3. Based on their answers, applicants were ranked as high-, medium- or low-risk. 4. Exam school applicants are now ranked on a combination of grades and tests. 5. Schools would rank their applicants, parents would list their top four choices, and a computer would match them up. 6. The formula used to rank applicants to the Latin School currently gives math scores on a standardized test twice the weight of verbal scores, Dinger said. 7. The INS has an elaborate system to insure the impartial handling of promotions to manager, which includes panels of experts who rank applicants numerically. 8. Applicants will be ranked by the points they receive and the names would be made public. |