
You think that’s where the bar was when Kennedy went to Harvard or Bush went to Yale? Your sole measure of a college’s elite status is how white and rich the students are. |
Your unrelenting focus on black kids is amazing. You know who got tutored back in the 80s and 90s and still today? Athletes. White, recruited athletes. But only now is this some cause for alarm. |
This!! White males is particular are losing cultural capital, thus seeing a stark decline in not only college attendance but completion as well. |
100% agree. These schools were “elite” because the of the wealth and connections. Sure, they also picked some genius unconnected kids to round it out. The “best and brightest” has a different meaning than you think. It was never only the top test scorers. They want future connections and future donors. Those are not always (and have never always been) the smartest people from an IQ perspective. |
I've yet to see grads at lower ranked schools invent novel products or companies. |
PP here. Disagree. There are so many highly qualified kids, so it's not like top schools are passing on a greater asset to accept a lesser one. That essentially what you are hinting at, and that would be false. Top schools are picking students that are highly competitive academically but also may bring something else to the table. Mine brought professional acting experience and concert level music skills to her magnet math basis. But, I would agree that there are plenty of bright and capable students in all tiers of schools. I just think this argument that now mid tier schools have the "smartest" students is based on fallacy (SAT / intelligence correlation) with a dash of sour grapes. We have more qualified, motivated students applying to top schools, and we need to expand our notions of what top schools are and where excellent education happens. So much of it is what students put into it anyway. |
Yes in the 50s and 60s they were country clubs but these schools became a lot more meritorcratic in the 80s and 90s. But in terms of eliteness, if the student body possesses neither fancy connections nor extraordinary ability, what makes it elite? If half the school is URM and FG's who are just smart enough to "do the work" and another quarter is athletes, it ain't what it used to be perhaps. |
Affirmative action |
And this is a good thing, BTW. The test scores are discriminatory. |
I don't think the midtier schools have the smartest. The top schools still do, although they have a lot of not so smartest ones floating around now too. I am saying "the smartest" used to really only be in the top 20 schools and now they are all over the place. Kids with Ivy League stats didn't used to go to Wake Forest or Franklin and Marshall. Now they do. In terms of these special abilities, which are the ultimate form of privilege as they require as massive financial and time commitment from an early age... my feeling is, who gives a crap? I think these schools fetishize this stuff way too much. But they have the luxury of beingn able to prioritize these unique talents. |
The facts: it isn’t. Virtually the same number of kids for the virtually same number of slots If you want to claim it’s harder show evidence of the contrary of the above. |
Getting rid of tests is discriminatory - against Asians in particular. |
This post coveys such a lack of understanding of education and such a limited concept of what it means to be "on par." Test scores aren't an objective measure of intelligence. Many qualities may be aspects of an exceptional student -- intelligence, organizational abilities, creative abilities, intuitive qualities, self knowledge/awareness, empathy, intellectual curiosity, individual talents, etc etc. But, abilities are a kind of base requirement. Schools with highly competitive admissions also select students not only for their abilities but also for the community they will create. That diversity in community, in turn, adds to the educational experience of all students. It is also racial bias targeting black/brown students as not "on par." |
I think every college counselor in America will tell you that if a kid with a certain profile could get into Amherst with 50% probality in 2018, then his odds are something much lower than that in 2022. |
Not sure about if really harder than 5 years ago, but definitely different than 30 years ago when parents applied to college. One factor is supply and demand. In 1990, there were 2.5 million HS graduates in US vs 3.7 million now (and higher percentage applying to college). On the other hand, the most sought after schools have not expanded the size of their incoming classes accordingly (while setting aside 10% or more for international students). |