So non-white applicants today should be "understanding" of an unfair admissions advantage for whites simply because of historical reasons? Many white people were not particularly sympathetic to affirmative action that was designed to address historical inequities and injustices, yet many white people are happy to defend their own privilege and tell non-whites to wait a few decades so they too can have an unfair advantage over an equivalent applicant. |
So no rigorous study, just a university employee who maybe said something on a webinar that you don't even link to, but we're to accept this as fact while you tell us to disregard NBER reviewed research studies that don't support your worldview. |
The webinar was for alumni only and legacy admissions was a formal agenda point. If you’re seriously trying to claim that the VP of Alumni Affairs made these numbers up - which are actually rather disappointing to many alumni who wish Stanford would place a greater emphasis on legacy - I can’t help you. Again, I personally support the end of legacy preferences altogether, and don’t know why you keep confusing me with other posters. Sincere best wishes to you and your DC. |
I did not say or imply anything of the sort. I just pointed out that legacy benefits were actually race neutral on their benefits within the legacy pool and pointed out that within that pool they might actually give Asian applicants a slightly higher boot than that received by others within that pool. Personally I think that the ultimate result of SFFA v Harvard was unfortunate; I am not in favor of eliminating affirmative action but rather reforming it to eliminate its benefit for High SES candidates of any race. I get tired of people dragging out and citing the Arcidicano paper because it is crap. It was designed to achieve specific result and the only way that they could achieve that result was by dropping a real factor in Harvards admissions rubric (personal). David Card's rebuttal did a very thorough job of dismantling Arcidicano's work. |
Arcidicano's paper is not "reviewed". It is classified as a working paper precisely to avoid review. |
If Stanford didn't make public that data you're saying the VP of Alumni Affairs stated in a closed door webinar, either via published research that has been peer reviewed or at the very list some sort of a university statement or report, there's no way to validate the data you're claiming as fact. We also don't know from your post whether that privately divulged data was for a single year (for example when they were facing pressure to end legacy admissions) or a general trend. Personally, I would be very surprised if it were true. |
I’m not the poster to whom you’re responding (I’m the Stanford poster), but that poster seems to think you and I are the same person so I wanted to say “hi” and make it clear we’re not. Not that I disagree with what you’re saying - I just don’t know enough about the Harvard case or related research to comment on any of it (which is why I haven’t, contrary to that poster’s belief). |
Personally, I would be very surprised if you know more about Stanford and CA than I do. I very much wish Stanford would feel more pressure to end legacy preferences, but the state mandate has no teeth, i.e. there are no financial consequences for non-compliance. Why are you so adamantly opposed to the truth (in regards to Stanford, that is - again, I have no idea about other schools)? The university has no incentive to provide false information that is disappointing to so many alumni, especially, as you point out, in a closed door webinar specifically for alumni. |
Thanks for the note and your contributions. The Harvard paper is very frequently used(actually misused) as proof of something that it was actually unsuccessful in proving because of the obvious contortions that were required to get the result necessary for the lawsuit. It is a long read and not surprisingly most people who cite it haven't actually read the paper or the rebuttal (also a long read) which carried the day in trial portion of that lawsuit. |
Arcidiacono is an economics professor at Duke. Working papers are not working papers to avoid review--they're typically made public to engender discussion and feedback prior to formal publication. But if you want to dismiss a published paper by an economics professor which found that whites were the primary beneficiary of legacy admissions, and that legacy admissions offered a considerable advantage relative to similarly qualified applicants (which is not the only published paper to draw that conclusion) as invalid, while telling us to accept the "data" you say a Stanford development officer stated in a non-public forum for alumni as "fact," there's not much point arguing with these #alternative facts. |
If you feel you know everything about an anonymous Internet poster, then personally, I'm not surprised that you're determined to cite facts for which there is no public evidence as the gospel. Perhaps Stanford is an outlier compared to HYP universities. But since you have zero data or statements to back it up, then you'll be preaching to those who want to take the word of an Internet rando. |
You still think we’re the same person. Oh well, I tried. |
I am asian and I would rather see legacy go away than see my kid at my top 10 alma mater. I don't like that he is steered towards following my footsteps like we are medieval blacksmiths or something. I don't like that he felt pressure to apply ED to my alma mater even though his dream school doesn't even have a legacy preference. Let kids follow their dreams according to their ability, not their parentage, not their skin color, not their connections. |
+1 |
I’m Asian American and also oppose legacy preferences, but why did/does your legacy kid feel pressured to apply to your alma mater? Mine didn’t. |