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Sure, but it also filters for people like me, who have seen this problem at least a dozen times.



When I did my university entrance interview (for maths, at Cambridge) the interviewers were clear that they expected that some subset of candidates would have seen the problem before, and some wouldn't -- for those in the first set they'd get them to quickly go through the problem and move onto the later parts which would be new to them; for those in the second set they'd provide sufficient guidance to let the candidate walk through the problem. The point was to get any particular candidate to a point in the problem sequence where this was something new to them, and then see how they tackled things. The idea that some applicants (usually from public schools) would have been very highly prepped for interview and others (usually from state schools) would not was clearly something they were well aware of and setting their interview design up to handle.


But how do you know it's a new problem? You can always fake a little struggle and thinking your way to the solution for a problem that you know the answer already.


Ya, these also can totally be gamed with the right amount of prep.


So why doesn't everyone pass the interview?

Either they can't be gamed, or they select for people who can at least be bothered to do the work to game them.


Depends on your resources for prep. Poor kids have less resources for that than rich kids, so they ultimately select for richer candidates.




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