Yes you don't need to know their race to score personality or any other things. So it'll be banned by the Supreme Court in accordance with Constitution. Everybody should be happy. |
They didn't have to prepare as much because they didn't need super high scores. Plus their parents aren't as obsessed with it. |
100+ pages in, this isn't just about grades (or SATs) but about applicants that excelled across all categories including ECs. Except personality scores only from ppl who never met them |
the bolded is actually very relevant. If they didn't see any applicant, then how are they judging "likeability" and personality? What was the rate "likeability" for black students? |
Yeah people really cherish this stereotype of Asians being one dimensional bookworms, or not leadership potential. This change can’t come soon enough. It saddens me though that liberals can’t see this clearly for what it is. |
Nope! Nobody cherishes any of this. Is there an Asian Parkland student denied Harvard over David? Is there an Asian basketball player that was recruited for basketball but denied entry because they were Asian? Is there an Asian swimmer recruited by the Harvard coach but when the admissions team saw Asian checked they were denied? |
You have many questions but we have a simple answer which will be executed. We will go race blind. Color of skin has nothing to do with all these. |
You have no answers. Admissions is race blind. Asians are being used by White Supremacists as an imaginary group being discriminated against. White prep school kids face the same competition as Asians students… but why highlight Asians, it’s political. |
What are you even talking about? No one is talking about someone exceptional and nationally recognized like the Parkland kids or for example Jazz Jennings or back in the day Natalie Portman. And this thread isn't about athletes/ALDC. |
100+ pages in, EVERYONE who applies to Harvard excels across the board, and for many of them that includes personality scores. Harvard is not trying to exclude Asians. |
Essays and letters of recommendation are the two most obvious. For some, it might include activities or some really interesting combination of classes they took. For others, their choice of research projects. Etc. |
+1 |
A not insignificant fraction of students at Harvard are not excellent and take primarily easy classes while they are there. It’s all relative though. Maybe you think they’re excellent. |
This! |
Then they should have no problem going race blind, correct? |