
The situation is more nuanced than just labeling it a war on meritocracy. Instead, it involves imposing equal outcomes by masking it under the guise of meritocracy. Notably, the STEM-focused admissions test has been replaced by an irrelevant personal essay, making the admission process subjective instead of objective. While there still exists a merit-based facade, it's underscored by lowered GPA requirements and basic algebra as admission benchmarks. While there's an appearance of merit, it's more like a veneer, all with the deliberate aim of suppressing the representation of a specific minority community. |
It’s not discrimination. Not race based and Asians have the highest number and rate of admission. |
The average GPA is *higher* with recent classes. |
Well said. |
Is grammar not your strong suit? I'm sure there is a coherent thought in there somewhere, but it's sure hiding. |
Rich people are no more entitled to public education than anyone else. Just like they aren’t entitled to extra fire department support. That’s not how taxes work. |
What is the value of national ranking of high schools? |
These kids do work hard. Sit down. |
Pure projection. |
It is discrimination. You can not based on race to reject applicants, regardless of the situation. |
Nobody here is getting a “free ride”. Kids are all working hard. Now, hard working kids from more MSs have access to TJ. It’s a good thing. |
Not discrimination. Asians students have the highest number of admits and the highest rate of admission. |
Rich people are not the only people paying taxes for the public school. A lot of middle-class people do (property tax). You really have no clue where the public school funding comes from. Why do you hate rich people so much? Most of them work hard and take risks to get ahead. Like I said, you cannot rely on free rides/handouts to get ahead |
Yes, it is. Any race-based process is discrimination. |
You deny it because you feel shame to accept the reality. |