CalTech is dedicated to the sciences. Not everyone wants to be one or go to CalTech. I also agree that the holistic view is the better bet overall for everyone. Nobody wants a room full of Stepford kids. |
Of course there are. Unfortunately, smart AA and Latino kids are immediately slapped with the moniker 'leg up' and admitted under affirmative action. My DC's best friend who is AA was admitted to UChicago with a perfect GPA and a 2380 SAT with the extracurriculars to boot. Both nobody here would ever give that kid the props they deserve because of their hard work and sacrifice. |
To continue the wild generalizations and stereotyping, what about the Asian kids who have come from the same economic background as other you are in the candidates, but who have worked their asses off studying and spending whatever Time they have available on education? Those who go to kaman instead of equally expensive sporting events? |
According to that report, something like 30% of the admitted kids are legacy. Talk about Stepford. |
30% of Asian or 30% of white? |
And what about the non-Asian kids who have come from high, middle, and poor economic backgrounds who work their asses off studying and foregoing sports, etc, and who could not afford expensive Kaplan preps and met and exceeded labeled expectations but are still under the label of affirmative action even though they earned it the good old fashion way. Sure would be nice to have that label removed. |
If you have an Asian kid from a socioeconomically disadvantaged background, then they ought to make that known in the application. That kid with perfect scores does very well. If you want to make an argument that economic advantage ought to be considered more seriously than race/ethnicity, I'm right there with you. |
Sorry, should say 30% of legacy application are admitted. Total population of undergrad is made up of 12 to 13% legacy. Doesn't break it down by race that I see. http://www.thecrimson.com/article/2011/5/11/admissions-fitzsimmons-legacy-legacies/ |
Not sure why you guys think sports isn't important. The guy next door to me who is an awesome golfer makes more money than I do, and my SAT scores definitely blew his out of the water. |
But people would still cry Aff. Action because a disproportionate number of Blacks and Latinos are lower SES. |
Yes. That's part of the holistic approach. Do you know what "holistic" means? |
You spelled dimensional wrong. |
Then let them. I still think Affirmative Action has a place in the U.S. I'm still seeing my kid with a Hispanic last name get put in the lowest reading group at the beginning of each year, despite being able to read better than almost anyone in her class, and then in the second month get put in the highest group. The biases and assumptions are still there. But I also think there should be a leg up for the white or Asian kid whose mom works at the grocery store. But in actual fact, I think that the holistic approach DOES take that into account. Imperfectly, I'm sure, but I don't think perfection is possible in this area. |
I wish we had an admission process where the applicant is merely designated with a number and there is no indication of race or other identifying information pertaining to ethnicity.
Then go ahead and use the holistic approach and it would be interesting to see which students were offered admission. |
^ but then what if few blacks and Hispanics got using that process? Then you'd have another lawsuit. |