Care to put that in writing in a legally enforceable contract? Or maybe just pledge here not to check the legacy box. |
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I must say the only reason I donate is because of the possibility of legacy admissions. If that goes bye bye, so will my donations.
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This is why admissions offices are forced to have legacy preferences. |
It's more than that since almost all jobs are based on personal networks (seriously how can you objectively tell recent college kids apart) admitting children of legacies also ensures future university donations and funding and since most major corporations are actively looking for minority candidates affirmative action makes sense from a financial standpoint for colleges as well This is all about money folks |
| Why would somebody go to Harvard if you strip them of the "connections" factor? |
No like the Jared Kushners of the world |
This is what people don't seem to get about the U.S. university system. It isn't a merit based hierarchy. |
Yeah, they're not getting rid of it ever. The whole economic system supporting private education would collapse. Very few people donate just out of fondness for their dear ol' alma mater. (My mom does, but it's a pittance and she really does have a great loyalty to her religious single-sex school, which was a great school for girls that couldn't get into other schools decades ago due to their religion or their gender, but is not at all a place she would have wanted any of her kids to go.) |
Or the Barack Obamas, who got into Harvard Law with a below 3.3 average from Columbia (having oddly transferred there from Occidental). Or George W Bushes, for that matter. |
Also, there's not just one type of "merit." Test scores and grades are important, but athletic talent, artistic or musical talent, other types of talents, and social connections all add value to a university, as does diversity. Take that all away and nobody who is important will send their kids to an "elite" university. Then it's no longer "elite." |
Well, since they both went on to become US Presidents, I doubt the universities regret their decisions to admit. You are ridiculous. |
This question was not being addressed from the POV of the universities, but from the opportunity cost to the students who were not admitted. Imagine if people of real intelligence had been admitted in their places, as opposed to these two over/under-achievers. A 16 year disaster could have been avoided. |
But these things build skills that are directly relevant to the actual business of elite undergraduate education. We send students to immerse themselves in a scholarly life. |
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MIT is far ahead of the curve on this. Probably part of the reason it isn't discussed here -- it could care less where your relatives did or didn't go to school.
http://mitadmissions.org/blogs/entry/just-to-be-clear-we-dont-do-legacy |
Citation, please. Or what you typed is bullshit. He graduated Magna Cum Laude and edited the Law review, and went on to have a coupla pretty important jobs, so clearly the admissions committee was correct in admitting him, right? |