Anonymous wrote:I think it remains to be seen if this will open up the floodgates. I am sure there are a lot of schools that don’t want to go this route and are hoping that others won’t force their hands.
Anonymous wrote:Harvard has such a crazy huge endowment that you wonder why they insist on legacy preferences. And legacy + faculty/staff advantage is huge at Harvard. I recently saw an article that 40% of students at Harvard are either legacy, faculty kids and/or recruited athletes. Pretty shocking
Anonymous wrote:Harvard has such a crazy huge endowment that you wonder why they insist on legacy preferences. And legacy + faculty/staff advantage is huge at Harvard. I recently saw an article that 40% of students at Harvard are either legacy, faculty kids and/or recruited athletes. Pretty shocking
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:While I get that legacy admissions mostly helps white kids, this also prevents URM kids whose parents went to these schools get in on the system.
So be it. A URM person who is educated in highly selective private colleges that practice legacy preferences is supposed to have enough education and financial capability to offer decent developmental opportunities for their children. They shouldn’t need “Legacy Preference clutch” to be able to walk into such institutions as freshmen students. If they still need such boost, then they don’t belong in those institutions in the first place.
Anonymous wrote:Amherst, Johns Hopkins, Carnegie Mellon, and MIT already don’t give Legacy preference in admissions decisions. Now add Wesleyan University to that august list. Of course, Harvard is anything but august as the Supreme Court decision abundantly makes it clear.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:While I get that legacy admissions mostly helps white kids, this also prevents URM kids whose parents went to these schools get in on the system.
So be it. A URM person who is educated in highly selective private colleges that practice legacy preferences is supposed to have enough education and financial capability to offer decent developmental opportunities for their children. They shouldn’t need “Legacy Preference clutch” to be able to walk into such institutions as freshmen students. If they still need such boost, then they don’t belong in those institutions in the first place.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:While I get that legacy admissions mostly helps white kids, this also prevents URM kids whose parents went to these schools get in on the system.
URMs legacy advantage at top schools is negligible. Whites had hundreds of years of a head start. The pipeline is already baked in.
Anonymous wrote:While I get that legacy admissions mostly helps white kids, this also prevents URM kids whose parents went to these schools get in on the system.
Anonymous wrote:While I get that legacy admissions mostly helps white kids, this also prevents URM kids whose parents went to these schools get in on the system.