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College and University Discussion
Again, this is one data point. The US will never do admissions based purely on the SAT. It isn't really in anyone's interest except a small number of families and kids who make scoring as high as possible on the SAT their life's mission. |
Where have you been??? Top schools do not simply pick off of SATs. That is one factor not the only factor. |
+1 There is not support for making the SAT score the end all be all determinant of college decisions. Most Americans are not envious of foreign colleges (except for the price). If the way foreign colleges handle it is so much better, surely they are open to Int’l students just like our colleges are. |
| Wonder how people would feel if admissions was largely based on SAT score and this resulted in classes at top schools heavily skewed towards men and mem are significantly more likely to score higher on the SAT than women |
WTF? Wanting a class of students from different backgrounds isn’t a “handout”. Your ignorance about US colleges is showing. |
Here in the US we have capitalism. Private colleges/universities are essentially businesses that provide a service. They define how they run their business. Aside from laws around discrimination and other protections, the government has little say in how they conduct their business. If you want a college that admits students solely based in a single test, you are welcome to go start one yourself. You will discover if the market is interested in that or not. That’s the beauty of the US. |
As overall students, women are better than men, and it’d be interesting to see what these colleges’ classes would look like if they stopped their 50/50 gender policies and went blind. |
The gender gap in SAT scores is pretty fascinating because it's where you the limitations of the test as a predictor of college performance. Women generally get better grades than men in college but persistently score 40 points lower, on average, on the SAT. Men are significantly more likely to score above 1400 than women even though women take the SAT at higher rates. The gender gap in SAT scores also contributes to the race gap -- black and Hispanic women are more likely to take the SAT than black and Hispanic men. Yet I have not heard anyone in this conversation suggest schools stop gender balancing classes. In fact schools often use the SAT as a tool to gender balance-- because women apply to college at higher rates (and at some schools much higher rates) schools can rely on the gender gap in SAT scores to boost male candidates to admission who might lag behind the rest of the class in GPA, rigor, leadership, and other factors. Schools do this even knowing that men, on average, get lower grades in college (even when their SAT score is higher). So schools are actively recruiting less qualified men in order to create better balance in college classes. I am curious what the data hawks on this thread who seem to believe the higher test scores of asian applicants should result in much higher admission rates of asian applicants think of gender disparities in testing, grades, and admissions. |
Wait. Are you not an adult? That explains a lot. |
At least at some of the most selective schools (like MIT, JHU, and Columbia), it seems Asian Americans have born the brunt of, if not all of, the “cost” of affirmative action. What’s disturbing to me is that these institutions have never corrected the widespread public perception that the “cost” was divvied up among white applicants as well. (I mean if your aim is to show your remorse/address your historical crimes, then one would assume you are bearing the cost yourself.) I think it was this seeming moral high ground on the part of the admission offices that made many Asian Americans, and the general public, accept Affirmative Action. If future litigation proves this was largely not the case, then I think the worldview/paradigm of many Asian Americans will drastically shift. I mean we always knew a thumb was on the scale in many areas – elite school admissions, entry to elite jobs, access to science research funding, etc., but I think we always thought college admissions at least was happening from a largely moral high ground. (I definitely am in favor of a transparent and widespread system to assist in Black American/Native American educational outcomes.) |
Again, this is the single most important and reliable data point. The gap in test scores is stunning. https://i0.wp.com/www.brookings.edu/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/ccf_20170201_reeves_2.png?w=768&crop=0%2C0px%2C100%2C9999px&ssl=1 |
It is probably the single most important factor. It correlates with a lot of other things you want to consider. |
If you don't like bans on abortion, surely you can leave the fkn country. See how stupid that argument is? We aren't calling for admissions based soolely on test scores. We are calling for admissions that do not racially discriminate and the test scores is the most obvious indicator that racial discrimination may be going on. |
And yet all the UMC Americans of Korean ancestry have zero problem with the current system. They love legacy, figure out how to excel at sports and other aspects of the college game, and about 70% vote Democrat because they are no longer interested in being the useful idiots of conservative causes that don’t actually help them much (and often times hurt them). The only Asian group that leans republican is Vietnamese, primarily because they don’t have the benefit of generations of actually being American. |
If you are choosing people to create racial diversity then it is illegal. It is racial discrimination and it is illegal. |