Then why are people against affirmative action if RACE is not the Only criterion for admission? |
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So I assume everyone who is opposed to affirmative action is also opposed to legacy admissions getting a leg up, right?
Why should Johnny get preference in admissions over Jamal or Jing or Jessie just because his parents went to that school. |
If there is pandering to white nationalists and racists or whites in general WHY is that not identity politics? Blacks have historical disadvantages due to slavery, jim crow and adverse social background to this day. Heck even today, they don't even get as many interview calls as whites with the same resume but only names changed. So yes an average black is disadvantaged compared to an average white. |
It could be because they are against giving advantages to certain people based on the color of their skin. |
Ofcourse not, then whats the point in paying the schools all that $$$? |
The AEI article takes data from the American Association of Medical Colleges and reformats it in the most inflammatory way possible, and then leaves off some pretty critical information. The original data from the American Association of Medical Colleges can be found here: https://www.aamc.org/download/321498/data/factstablea18.pdf And specifically, if you look at this table, some crucial facts can be gleaned: https://www.aamc.org/download/321498/data/factstablea18.pdf The average total MCAT score of applicants: All applicants--501.8 White--504.0 Asian--503.1 Hispanic--496.2 Black--494.1 IOW, the average black applicant had an MCAT score that was 2 percent lower than the average white applicant. Not exactly scandalous. What is also shown in this table (conveniently omitted from the AEI piece), is the racial make-up of the total applicant pool and the total matriculant pool: All applicants--53,042 White--25,544 (48%) Asian--10,906 (21%) Hispanic--3,300 (6%) Black--4,344 (8%) Mixed race/ethnicity--4,734 (9%) All matriculants--21,030 White--10,828 (51%) Asian--4,475 (21%) Hispanic--1,335 (6%) Black--1,497 (7%) Mixed race/ethnicity--1,858 (9%) So admission rates (matriculants divided by applicants) are: White--42% Asian--41% Hispanic--40% Black--34% Mixed race/ethnicity--39% And the average total MCAT scores of matriculants are: White--510.1 Asian--510.5 Hispanic--503.0 Black--502.5 Mixed race/ethnicity--508.1 In 2016-2017, the average black matriculant had a total MCAT score that was 1.5 percent lower than the average white matriculant. Happy to be corrected if my math or reading of the AAMC's data is off. |
If they can rise above the culture of cheating, and if they are Asian Americans as opposed to international students, I feel that they deserve what they earn. Many Asian American families I know forbid sports and other pursuits and require the children to devote 99% of their free time to academics. That is not a lifestyle I would choose, but I assume children of any race would excel in academics with that strategy. I prioritize a well rounded and less stressful childhood over such an academic focus, and I am willing to allow my kids to "suffer" through less than an elite college in order to allow them other pursuits. |
| Very outdated stereotypes about Asian-Americans, pp. Calling multiple, very different cultures all cheaters. Claiming Asian-Americans don't do sports. Do you even know any Asian-American kids? |
| Do some races find affirmative action to be insulting? The assumption that some races are less capable and therefore need lower criteria based only on the color of their skin seems an awful lot like racism. |
I have one kid at Oakton HS and one at TJ. These are not assumptions. |
You can't and thats why admissions is not a clear Black/white issue and will always have shades of grey. So admissions will always be contentious no matter what the ratio is AS LONG AS it is viewed as a Zero-sum game. But it is not zero sum game because there is not just one great school. And with competition many previously lesser school starts getting better. So its not the end of the world UNLESS it is viewed with a racial zero-sum game of a black man's gain is a white man's loss. The administration wants to create that view for political purposes. |
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I fail to see the problem with this statement. I am half white and half URM. I always identify white. Remember your life experience is not universal to all. |
| Even if race is removed from college applications, admissions officers will still make assumptions based on names |
There is an absolute in this situation. You are white and you are (unspecified?) URM. Asking what one identifies as instead of what one is implies that there is no absolute. |