One race scored demonstrably lower on the over all score based on personality and you answer is essays? So you think Asian American applicants wrote essays that where boring? OK racist. |
They're looking for future leaders who will bring them fame and glory and tons of money, and they believe they've found another tool to help them in figuring this out. Any measurement is going to have some groups that end up on top, and others that don't. Asians having the lowest scores does not indicate that they're being deliberately excluded. I'll bet if you broke it down by extracurricular activity instead of race, you'd find that athletes score higher than any other group and that those with no ECs would score lowest. That would not mean that those with no ECs were being discriminated against. |
You don't get to decide what is qualified. You are also a f-ing liar, as kids admitted under this policy are NOT "FLUNKING" (idiot vernacular not mine) OUT and you have no evidence they are. You are a terrible person if you are not a troll. You need to do some self-examination. |
Lol Actually studies show that top of the class student who go to elite colleges and are all of a sudden not top do worse than kids who have great grades but are okay with struggling or have another “thing”/passion (sports/arts) that define them. That is why there is holistic admission because the outcome is better |
"Not qualified or capable" based on what? Who is defining the criteria for these schools? Big government? What if their criteria is "different life experience/perspective"? |
+1 At my elite school, the kids who were "flunking out" were the athletes. Everyone else was highly qualified. |
No. It is liberal arts that, to the extent it is hard at all, is "a lot of work not hard work". I have STEM degrees and liberal arts degrees so my brain "works" both ways. There is absolutely no question that STEM is objectively harder and not just "more work". |
Sure, a school saying that Asian American applicant have bad personalities is in no way racist. Especially coming from an institution with a history of discriminating against those who they did not want attending in large numbers despite being qualified. This is totally different than Jewish applicants and Catholic before them and we should totally give Harvard the benefit of the doubt now |
+1 It sounds like the PP who was rationalizing slavery earlier. |
Not qualified based on test scores and GPA, which have a vast history of correlation with having the capability to succeed in college. "different life experience/perspective" does not correlate at all with capability to do college-level work. |
The top of the class does “best”, then it’s the athletes/artists/activists, then it’s the smart kids who were top of their class /SATs but standing next to the top 10% didn’t measure up (but are still amazing) … but they seem to not soar after graduation. |
Nobody is being admitted with test scores/GPA that correlate with not being able to do the work at elite college (and UNC). |
Nope. You asked for an explanation. Essays and their rating are not objective. Maybe they are too well-written. Maybe their struggles and obstacles arent identifiable. Maybe they dont have self-directed activities. OR MAYBE JUST MAYBE, there are some students who write better essays or have better topics etc or struggles that they have overcome that rates them higher. I would also direct you to the other points. Other people that have met them dont seem to rate them higher than the white counterparts either. I would also note that the chart only compares WHITE TO ASIAN. Not to any other race. Interesting..... |
It’s harder to get an A perhaps but it’s not harder than a theater major performing. |
"Succeed in college" in what way? Why do you get to define what "success" means for colleges? So you get to decide what is "college-level work"? Why can't colleges decide their own definition of the "work" and the "capability"? And test scores do not predict academic success in college. |