Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is easy to determine. Go to the school’s common data set and look at applications and admits by gender. Compute a percentage to see if there is a bias.
I have never seen this work in practice after looking through CDS. Even where a gender imbalance where women outnumber men, the admit rate for men is usually lower in my experience. Would be curious of any schools people find where men are minority AND men have a higher acceptance rate.
Look at William & Mary's data, which is a pretty representative of how college's are on average 60% percent women nowadays
https://nces.ed.gov/collegenavigator/?q=William+%26&s=all&id=231624#enrolmt
Look under the Admissions tab - men accepted at 39% percent vs. women at 30%
Then look at the Enrollment Tab and the Undergraduate Student Gender Tab - 58% women vs. 42% Men
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is easy to determine. Go to the school’s common data set and look at applications and admits by gender. Compute a percentage to see if there is a bias.
I have never seen this work in practice after looking through CDS. Even where a gender imbalance where women outnumber men, the admit rate for men is usually lower in my experience. Would be curious of any schools people find where men are minority AND men have a higher acceptance rate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is easy to determine. Go to the school’s common data set and look at applications and admits by gender. Compute a percentage to see if there is a bias.
I have never seen this work in practice after looking through CDS. Even where a gender imbalance where women outnumber men, the admit rate for men is usually lower in my experience. Would be curious of any schools people find where men are minority AND men have a higher acceptance rate.
You have to look at the data on the quality of applicant pool too. But W&M is a place where men are admitted at a higher rate than women.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is easy to determine. Go to the school’s common data set and look at applications and admits by gender. Compute a percentage to see if there is a bias.
I have never seen this work in practice after looking through CDS. Even where a gender imbalance where women outnumber men, the admit rate for men is usually lower in my experience. Would be curious of any schools people find where men are minority AND men have a higher acceptance rate.
Anonymous wrote:This is easy to determine. Go to the school’s common data set and look at applications and admits by gender. Compute a percentage to see if there is a bias.