A high school student who failed out of a prestigious U.S. university gets a job at Google, his ‘dream job’… How?

Attention is being drawn to the story of Google, a global company메이저놀이터, hiring high school students who had been rejected by dozens of prestigious U.S. universities. According to ABC7

News on the 12th (local time), Stanley Jong-an (18), a student at Gunn High School in Palo Alto, California, USA , despite excellent grades of 3.97 out of 4.0 in GPA and 1,590 out of 1,600 in SAT . I was rejected by 16 of the 18 universities I applied for admission to. Of the schools he applied to as a computer science major, Stanley was accepted to only two: the University of Texas and the University of Maryland. However, he failed all prestigious universities such as Massachusetts Institute of Technology ( MIT ), Stanford, UC Berkeley, Carnegie Mellon, and California Institute of Technology (Caltech). However, Stanley was offered a full-time software engineer position at Google and joined the company. With just a high school diploma, he was able to get a job at the world’s best IT company. Google paid attention to Stanley’s unusual history. Previously, Stanley founded the electronic signature startup ‘RabbitSign’ in his second year of high school, and was recognized for his coding skills learned from his father, a software engineer at Google, so he caught the eye of Google recruiters as early as 2018 . Stanley, who considered attending the University of Texas before receiving a job offer from Google, said, “I’m having a good time now at the Google campus, not the university campus.” “I didn’t expect to be accepted to Stanford or MIT , but I was surprised to receive rejection letters from state schools where I thought I would have a chance,” said Stanley . “I didn’t know it would be this bad,” he said. Stanley’s story has spread throughout American society, igniting debate about problems with the college admissions system, including unclear admission criteria and lack of transparency. “Transparency is needed in college admissions,” Stanley said. “When my story became known, many speculations arose as to why I was not admitted to a prestigious university, and such speculation should not continue. A reason is needed for refusal of admission. Thoroughly. “You can’t just turn a blind eye to the secretive entrance exam process and just watch the results,” he pointed out.

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