I hope they also get rid of legacy preference and preference for athletes. |
* see post re: Gate keepers |
There is no way I’m sending my kid to a 80% Asian school, no matter how good it is. The top schools in this country obviously share my views. There is a lot more diversity in 100 white kids than in 100 Asian kids. |
Whoa. You just like… went there. 🍿 |
This is so true. Harvard is a relatively mediocre education at the undergraduate level. It's the caliber of the student body admitted, the cachet and connections that make the difference. Even then, it really only gets you through that first hoop or two post-graduation. You still have to perform, but you have a lot further to fall. And graduate schools can't be 100% HYPS grads. So again, you'll compete with your HYPS classmates for those coveted graduate positions as well as those prestige professional positions (law/ibanking/consulting/PE/tech/etc). |
Yay! I’ve always felt reverse discrimination. |
The admission system is most certainly not going to be based on academic merit. Never had been and never will be. |
Colleges will find other ways to work around this. |
A small step in the correct direction. |
I guess if you don’t value diversity. |
Admission decisions should not be based solely on academic merit. I have no doubt that HYP receives enough applicants who score 100% on SAT to fill the entire first class. But academic merit is not the only requirement for a successful life. In the sports arena, there are dozens, if not more, of examples with hugely natural talent who never lived up to their potential. |
Harvard is not. A lot of other colleges are after Harvard takes their pick. |
SAT measures how well you take a standardized test. Nothing more. |
Because he recognizes that with affirmative action, blacks will have a stigma associated that they are not qualified. Clarence Thomas was on the Supreme Court, and liberals still call him an affirmative action beneficiary who is Scalia's lawn jockey. |