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College and University Discussion
I don’t agree that the sat math test has bias, but math tests can definitely select for certain educational topics that are only taught at certain schools. STEM coursework isn’t beyond social stratification. |
I dunno, something about being the best students all throughout school kinda makes that difficult |
That's the disconnect since thinking your the best is different than being the best. |
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“and it's also okay for schools to decide they'd rather take a valedictorian from Eastern High School in DC than another kid from a W school in Bethesda or Sidwell or Harvard-Westlake even if the kid from the more elite school has higher SAT scores and more and better APs. Colleges are allowed to preference backgrounds that are under-represented at these schools over backgrounds that are overrepresented and if it impacts the racial makeup of the classes too bad.”
+1 As it should be. Colleges “discriminate” on other stuff too. Many are lopsided on girls so it’s easier to get in as a boy. Many don’t have enough middle state kids or rural kids so it’s easier to get in from those places. I have a Nova girl so none of this is useful for me but I understand why it happens. |
Hm.. then why are universities like MIT, Stanford reinstituting test required? Do they not "read the data"? |
It is like the saying at the end of the Holocaust museum. Fair people just want to be represented . I question those whose goal is over representation. |
Well it's at algebra 2 level. Enough of excuses. |
This. We also have a high achieving white girl in a DC suburb and know this will cut against her in applications to certain schools. Even her ECs are kind of stereotypical. Oh well. Fortunately we have never had an Ivy or bust attitude. If your kid goes to a competitive private HS there's even an added layer to this where these HSs seek to game the system a bit by limiting where students apply (knowing top schools were the small class cohorts are unlikely to take 20 kids from one HS even if it's known for turning out great students). So if you are in competitive privates this idea of needing to apply for "fit" and recognizing you are really competing against other students with your same profile is made more obvious. Sure some people might grumble about it because of course you see that private education as superior to what a student from an inner city public is getting. But it doesn't stop people from applying to these same colleges year after year. And it is in part because if the diversity of the students and knowing these schools recruit the top students from a variety of backgrounds and this will lead to better school experiences and alumni networks. |
+1 Reasonable poster, I agree with PP that your clear and correct arguments will do nothing to shut the troll up. But we appreciate your ability to present this in a neutral way. It's refreshing. |
Thinking you are something isn’t the same thing as being that something. The only one who decides what makes the best applicants for a particular college is that college. They aren’t all looking for the same thing. And they certainly don’t want 2000 carbon copies of the same thing. |
It’s a data point. It’s just not the only one. |
You have a weird mindset. Every individual is unique. |
Are you new to the US? You seem to have no understanding of the culture or history. |
It's well into the 21st century already. |
Yes. And race is one aspect of an individual. And it can be considered wrt to that individual. “Nothing in this opinion should be construed as prohibiting universities from considering an applicant’s discussion of how race affected his or her life, be it through discrimination, inspiration, or otherwise” |