Graduating and graduating from your intended major are two very different things. GPA differences matter as well. Housing, food and transportation are an expense people overlook as is being able to work while in college. |
Show evidence they aren’t graduating in intended majors. Engineering programs at top colleges have incredibly high yield, so this is news to me. |
| Why so many crappy AI posts. |
Elite colleges come with housing food and transportation… |
Most of the posts here aren’t worth much more than an Ai reply to be frank. OP’s post can be answered with a single google search and like 5 minutes of free time. New York Times has probably released 20+ articles on this very topic just this year. |
I don’t object to the athletes getting in at all. They raise money for the school and build school spirit, alumni stay more engaged giving the academic students more networking opportunities. They give more than they take. The FGLI students just take and provide no benefit. |
Because they are special which is why they are coveted in IB. It is why they have superior admissions success to med school other items held equal and also why they tend to perform better in med school as well. It is why Ken Griffin specifically said that they are who he prefers to hire at Citadel because they perform when things are tough. Cry and whine all you want because deep down you are just resentful because you know that they are better. |
Well, not just Citadel. All of finance likes them. And the rest of corporate America. They perform, on a schedule, with public scrutiny. With their failures on display. And then after a humiliating defeat, in front of family and friends they take a few hours, shake it off go back at it again. Over and over for years. The athletes are valuable to an organization because of the string of failures they faced before they could succeed. Also, and this is what really pisses of the grinder set, the professors love the athletes too. They are admired, because what they do is difficult. And they are more successful at life. https://www.harvardmagazine.com/2024/11/ivy-league-athletics-career-success-harvard-study |
Most of this is denial of the obvious: they’re mostly rich, from well connected backgrounds, and people help them a lot more than other students. At DD’s lac, athletes are mostly rich white students, a few Asian, and they all came from boarding schools and the like. Their parents are in the industry, and so are their parents’ friends. The athlete only alumni network fast track hires them and gives them everything they need. One kid has a 3.0, ppe major, and has very little remarkable going for him, except daddy works at a top firm and you can guess where he’ll be this summers. They then join organizations, create blocking of narrowly defined merit, and clash against others who aren’t like them- I’ve had personal experience rig a team like this at google, who absolutely refused to hire non athletes and borderline discriminated against non white applicants. I don’t resent athletes. I recognize their very hard work and real talent, but many are essentially spoon fed and sell lies about merit when it’s really all about wealth. |
So, you didn't read the article. They talk about socioeconomic factors. Guess what, the poor athletes have the same excess performance in the job market. Give your kids some golf lessons or something. |
| School teachers teach to keep their jobs and secure funding for schools, students do academics and activities for college resume. If focus shifts back to curiosity and learning without worrying about grades, scores, resumes ,college acceptances etc. |
| Just like tuition and prep for grades and scores, athletes get coaching and training to make teams. Wealth gives privilege. You can start charities and businesses to fluff resume. |
Most collegiate sports are non-revenue generating. The squash team isn’t raising anything for the school and no one’s paying enough attention to them to constitute school spirit. As for your last sentence, if you really want to go on record that no first-generation, low-income students provide any benefit to the university community, you’re both an idiot and a horrible person. |
Wow, so college should run like a company, who can bring more revenue can get in. But even company don't run like that today. Where are moral and social obligation for colleges? given the resources, how can you be sure FGLI would still be lagging academically, that's exactly top colleges are doing, giving them a chance. Do you think the guy transferred from Fordham to UPenn failed English class in high school? how come he's given a chance. |
Wow. So much of this is problematic. Contrary to popular belief, college -- and elite colleges -- is not just a pathway or tool for the upper- and upper-middle class to continue education after high school. College is one of the most reliable tools for economic mobility FOR THE LOWER CLASSES. It's baked into the ethics of the US educational system. They are not just supposed to serve as finishing schools for the elite, many of whom -- let's be honest here -- probably could get into high income jobs through connections. College is a place where the playing field can be leveled. And to suggest that first income students are only allowed to go to community college is so classist. If they can get into Harvard or UVA based on GPA and test scores -- even if the threshold for their scores is slightly lower to account for the fact that they don't have the familial advantages -- so be it. Contrary to popular belief, those schools are not just welcoming low income students into college if those students fail to admit rigerous admissions criteria. Sure, the criteria might be slightly less rigerous, but again, that's because of the role of higher ed in the US as a place to break down class barriers. In the city where I live, the selective K-12 schools require a test for admission. They also prioritize students from low-income neighborhoods, because those students have more factors working against them (if you're from a rich area, your score required to get in will on average be higher than in a poorer area). They still have to have a high test score and a high GPA, and to be more merit-based they even fill a large chunk of the seats based on score alone without any other considerations. On paper, does that mean that a kid from a lower-income neighborhood will enter with a lower score than one from a higher income neighborhood? Typically, yes. BUT THEN the schools provide wraparound support to help those students keep up and graduate, which they ultimately do end up doing. They take the same classes, they are graded on the same rubric. And maybe their GPA still ends up lower because they had to work a job to support their family, instead of having their family provide them with tutoring support. THAT is why colleges prioritize students from low income or first generation backgrounds. They typically have disadvantages that wealthier students typically do not have. BUT THEN it should be up to the college to provide the additional support needed to make sure those students are successful, be it through one-on-one counseling or a summer bridge program or some other supports. I am aware none of this addresses OP's question but I just had to sound off here about the previous comments. |